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How Architectural Landmarks Reshape the Beijing Skyline

The 2008 Beijing Olympic is more than a sports gala. Outstanding artists and performers from the world gather in Beijing to stage fantastic cultural feasts for the host city. The egg-shaped National Center for the Performing Arts (NCPA) is the right place to present wonderful performances. Among the extravaganza are graceful Russian ballet performances, classic music, ebullient samba from Latin America, remarkable Broadway musicals, and Irish tap dancing.

The ongoing performances are attracting though, the theatre itself is also an eye-catcher that can not be missed. Adjacent to the Great Hall of the People and the Tiananmen Square, the egg-shaped NCPA makes a showy display at the center of Beijing despite mounting controversy before its construction. Though lambasted as inappropriate and strange, the NCPA is here to stay. Designed by French architect Paul Andreu, the gigantic three-hall theatre is housed in a mammoth titanium and glass shell. Though the outside may look like a prop from War of the Worlds, the interior wins over most visitors. The dramatic entrance takes guests through transparent, underwater corridors in the Egg’s reflection pool.

The new CCTV towers

The buildings that reshape the Beijing skyline are more than the above mammoths. The new CCTV (China Central Television) towers located on the East Third Ring Road are considered the most bizarre and grandiose construction in Beijing due to the way they connect. Some call the CCTV Tower “big pair of underwear,” but anyone well schooled in cartoons will think Sponge Bob.

Rem Koolhaas and Ole Scheeren of the Rotterdam-based Office for Metropolitan Architecture overcame great technical difficulties to build the 230 meter tower. The connection of the two separate towers is like a fiction story: construction had to be stopped after the sun rises because quality control would be difficult when steel swelled under the bright sunlight. The CCTV towers cost 5 billion yuan and consume 120 thousand tons of steel, with its scale second only to the Pentagon in the United States.

Whether they are awesome and splendid, or strange and bizarre, these gigantic buildings have become part of Beijing. The capital has always be the test field of novelty structures. Hundreds of years ago, the Forbidden City and the Yuanmingyuan Garden must have been the immediate talk of the town upon completion. Half a century ago, the top ten architectures in Beijing, including the Great Hall of People, the History Museum and Beijing Railway Station, were also considered unconventional and eye-opening. And today, these spectacular structures either dedicated to sports, performances or media coverage are here to stay and make themselves the new landmark architecture in Beijing.

By Dong Jirong

Editor: Feng Hui

 

 
 

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Key Words

Tea   West Lake   

Temple      Su Dongpo 

zhouzhuang

Fans   Embroidery

Garden     Fuzimiao

Zhonghua Gate

Nanjing Salted Duck

 
 
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