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Beijing : Events

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  • National Day

    Marking the anniversary of Mao’s 1949 speech in which he declared the foundation of the People’s Republic. Crowds turn out to watch massed parades of high-kicking soldiers, and a jam-packed Tian’an Men Square is colored red by a sea of hand-held, waving flags.

  • French architect Paul Andreu’s silvery “Giant Egg” (see National Grand Theater), completed in 2006, provides a shocking contrast to the monolithic, slab-like Socialist architecture of neighboring Tian’an Men Square. The building is surrounded by a reflective moat and accessed by an underwater tunnel (upsetting Chinese critics who claim this resembles the entrance to a traditional tomb). At night, a part of the façade is transparent so passers-by can see what’s going on inside.

  • Built to host gymnastics and handball during the 2008 Games, the stadium boasts a sinuously curving roof with slatted beams, which is inspired by traditional Chinese folding fans. After the Games are over, the stadium will stage entertainment events, such as concerts.

  • Set to be the centerpiece of the Olympics, when finished Beijing’s new stadium will be the world’s biggest enclosed space, capable of holding 100,000 spectators. The innovative design by Swiss architects Herzog and de Meuron resembles a giant bird’s nest.

  • The largest construction project on earth, British architect Sir Norman Foster’s new terminal will welcome athletes from around the world to the 29th Olympiad in 2008. The design resembles a soaring dragon in red and yellow.

  • Although overshadowed by Chinese New Year, which takes place soon after, Western New Year is still a public holiday throughout China.

  • The Olympic Green will surround the high-tech Olympic Village. It’s part of an overall masterplan to soften the city with trees, parks, and forested beltways in the run up to 2008. At the heart of the Green is a dragon-shaped lake, the tail of which runs by the National Olympic Stadium.

  • The Convention Center is one of the principal buildings of the main Olympic Green complex in the north of the city. It will serve as the competition venue for the fencing events. It will also double as the main press center for the Games.

  • Rem Koolhaas’s third high-profile Beijing project is a companion piece to his show-stopping CCTV Building. It may lack the visual impact of its sibling but when complete it will have much to offer Beijingers and visitors to the city, combining as it does a planned five-star hotel and 1500-seat theater, plus several restaurants, and exhibition spaces.

  • Also known as Qing Ming, which literally means “clear and bright.” Chinese families visit their ancestors’ graves to tidy them up and make offerings of snacks and alcohol, an event that often turns into a picnic.

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