Archive for January, 2009

Jan 30 2009

‘Bird’s Nest’ to become entertainment, shopping center

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Citic Group said on Friday it will in three to five years build the National Stadium into an entertainment and shopping center, while seeking to hold more sports games and cultural performances.

The “Bird’s Nest” will continue to develop tourism as its major business, while gradually tapping its auxiliary commercial facilities and turning them into a station for entertainment and shopping, said the Citic Group.

It will also actively hold sports games and entertainment performances, said the company, adding that it seeks to further promote the brand of the National Stadium, the major venue for the Beijing Olympics.

An individual company was established by Citic Group, Beijing Urban Construction Group and Golden State Holding Group Corporation to focus on the operation of the “Bird’s Nest” business.

According to the company, maintenance of the 250,000-square-meter National Stadium will annually cost 60 million yuan (about 8.82 million U.S. dollars), making it particularly hard to make profit.

No responses yet

Jan 30 2009

Sci-tech ‘temple fair’ celebrates Spring Festival

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Temple fairs are popular during holiday, and museums are trying to get a piece of the action. One museum is marketing itself a science and technology temple fair.

At a science museum in Beijing, five robots are welcoming visitors with New Year’s greetings.

These robots are famous after a stint last year as envoys of the Beijing Olympic Games. After a half-year tour across the nation, they’ve returned to the capital city to perform for Spring Festival.

A visitor said, “They can stand up with only one leg. I wonder how they can do it for so long.”

What most impressed these people was the debut of training machines used by China’s national sports teams.

One seventy year-old man found out what it’s like for a professional athlete to train for yacht racing, “It’s a very good opportunity to experience this. I want to try all the machines here.”

Event organizer said, “The machine can measure your heart beating, racing distance and other data to help your train.”

These two kids are comparing their swimming skills. Without setting foot in the water, this training machine can improve arm strength crucial for top competitors.

Surrounded by these young people is a man wearing a small gadget. It’s not headphones, but a device for monitoring the wearer’s health.

Connected with a computer, it can measure your breathing rate, heart rate, and other targets quickly, displaying your level of health through a picture of a tree. The more leaves the tree has, the better your health is.

No responses yet

Jan 30 2009

Happy Niu Year

Published by Turner under Culture

[#3: Edit Options>MightyAdsense>Adsense Code]

You read it right, I mean Happy “Niu” Year, not “New” Year.

About 12 hours later, the Chinese Lunar New Year is coming. The year of Ox is coming to us.

Ox is written in Chinese characters as ?, or Niu. Since the pronunciation of Niu is exactly New, and there is a trend to use Niu and New interchangeably among my friends.

So, Happy Niu Year and Happy New Year to all my readers, my friends and family!

For more information about the Chinese Zodiac, check here.

My Wishes

This blog is trying to be a bridge between the western world, and the eastern world, the two distinctly different worlds, and I am trying so hard to help people outside China to understand what is happening here, and what is in people’s mind. I hope the greeting brings the happiness and hope of the Chinese New Year to people who do not celebrate this holiday.

From today, the whole China is in a 7 day holiday – the longest holiday in China (of cause accompanied by the largest human migration in the world every year for returning to hometown). I hope my friends who are in holiday enjoy their holiday and relax, and prepare for the new year, and for my friends who don’t know the Chinese New Year to also celebrate one more holiday – that is the meaning of holiday: to have people collectively celebrate for the past accomplishment and looking forward to the better future.

I’d like the take the chance for my loyal readers who have been with me for many years (some for as long as 7 years). There are not too many 7 years in life, and daily accompany is a huge accomplishment. I would love to thank everyone who have commented on my blog. You made the blog much more meaningful than just my post, and contributed the majority of the content on this blog. Your continuous feedback, compliment, supplementary, and even challenge helped me so much to understand this world better. It is much more than what I have expected when I started this daily blog 7 years go.

Last, but not least, I would love to say thank you to my close friends and family who we live in the same physical daily world (v.s. the online world). I may devote more time online than offline sometimes these years, and spent the time I may have otherwise spent on coffee or tea time with others. Thanks especially for Yifan and Wendy’s support. They have a much less devoted father or husband than others. Thanks.

Wish everyone has a great year of Ox.

 

Posted by Jian Shuo Wang at January 25, 2009 12:23 PM
Copyright: You are free to redistribute this work, as long as you keep this
disclaimer and this link: http://home.wangjianshuo.com/archives/20090125_happy_niu_year.htm

No responses yet

Jan 29 2009

Archaeologists try to revive daily life of ancient Chinese capital

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Archaeologists are uncovering the details of city life as it was 2,000 years ago in the ancient Chinese capital of Chang’an.

As the capital of the Western Han Dynasty (202 BC to 8 AD), Chang’an was a metropolis with an area of 36 square kilometers, about four times the size of the contemporary Rome. Its ruins lay in the suburb of today’s Xi’an, capital of northwestern Shaanxi Province.

“After about five decades of work, we can map out the city’s clear layout now, but we still know little about how its 240,000 residents lived,” said Liu Zhendong, the head of an excavation team from the Institute of Archaeology under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), in an interview with Xinhua.

The 12-gate, walled city had eight avenues, each of which were 45 to 55 meters wide and lined with trees.

Its wall was 12 meters high, 25,700 meters long and surrounded by an eight-meter-wide moat. To run around it would be equal to take running half marathon.

“Archaeologists have excavated several major palaces and city gates but have not discovered the residences of ordinary people,” Liu said. “Did they live in courtyards like those in old Beijing? We do not know.”

The city was divided into 11 neighborhoods. Those of royal families and nobles were in the city’s southern part while shops, workshops and houses of common people were situated in the northeast.

Liu and his colleagues have been working in that area for months.

“Some construction material was unearthed, such as stone slabs with inscriptions of names of locations, or their owners,” he said. “This area will be our focus in the coming years.”

Meanwhile, the archaeologists will work on the later relics that laid upon the Western Han ruins as Chang’an remained the capital of several later kingdoms.

“We believed that the palace area of later kingdoms were in this area,” he said. The team has just excavated a palace gateway in December and unearthed well-preserved palace walls and stone bases of pillars.

After four centuries of rule by the Han Dynasty (Western and Eastern Han Dynasties), China was divided into several small kingdoms between 220 AD and 581 AD.

Some of those kingdoms, with the capital in Chang’an, were founded by nomadic ethnic groups from the north, later known as the Mongols.

“The palace gateway was an interesting finding. We hardly knew about the buildings of these kingdoms and it would help,” he said.

“Like the ancient site of Pompeii, the study of large-scale ruins requires about 100 or 200 years of excavation,” said Liu Qingzhu, a veteran archaeologist from the same institute as Liu Zhendong.

Archaeologists have just excavated about 0.1 percent of the total area of Chang’an ruins.

“Sometimes I feel like competing with time. Because irreversible damage occurred to the relics because of natural and man-made reasons,” Liu Zhendong said.

No responses yet

Jan 28 2009

Beijing lifts restrictions on property purchase by foreigners

Published by admin under Beijing Today

Restrictions on foreigners buying real estate property in Beijing were called off as Beijing introduced a slew of measures Friday to revitalize the sluggish property market.

The residency requirement and house type limits for foreign expatriates buying homes in Beijing has been called off throughout 2009, according to the 15 opinions co-released by nine departments — including the municipal construction committee, development and reform commission and finance bureau of Beijing.

In 2007, the local government issued regulations stipulating only expatriates living in Beijing more than one year and those who could provide details proving they would be the primary inhabitants could buy one house.

“In simple words, foreign expatriates in Beijing could buy only one house then,” said Li Wenjie, general manager of real estate agency Centaline China’s North China Branch. “The house price skyrocketed at that time. The government wanted to curb foreign capital in driving up the property price.”

Foreign purchases accounted for seven to eight percent in all the real estate transaction in Beijing before the regulation took effect. After that, the number dropped to 0.5 percent, he said.

No responses yet

Jan 27 2009

Most Chinese like CCTV Spring Festival gala

Published by admin under Variety life

The annual CCTV Spring Festival gala continued to receive overwhelming attention and affection from Chinese people, according to a survey by CTR MarketResearch Co. Ltd.

A total of 55.2 percent of the interviewed families thought the show was “very good”, and 25.9 percent rated it as “fairly good”.

The show featured major events in 2008, including relief efforts after the 8.0-earthquake in Sichuan Province, the Beijing Olympic Games and the successful spacewalk during the Shenzhou 7 mission.

Popular singers, dancers, actors and Chinese crosstalk actors presented more than four hours of performance. It also used a multi-media backdrop and sophisticated staging structure.

No responses yet

Jan 26 2009

Visit Beijing Temple Fair

Published by Turner under Photos

Today is the first day of the new year. We went to the Ditan Temple Fair today and took some picturesdsc04349

dsc04359

dsc04360

dsc04364

dsc04371dsc04377

No responses yet

Jan 25 2009

The Spring Festival and Dumpling

Published by Turner under Culture

The Spring Festival is the most important and the biggest traditional festival in China. Maybe you have already heard of many interesting customs about the Spring Festival, but did you know the local customs can be rather different in different areas of China. Even if some of these customs are the same, the legends are not.

For example, eating dumplings on Spring Festival Eve is the tradition in northern China, while in southern China, people eat glutinous rice cakes and spring rolls, or dumplings with egg wrappers instead of the traditional dumpling skin.

There are many reasons why people in northern China eat dumplings on Spring Festival Eve. One reason is that the shape of the dumplings resembles the ancient Chinese gold ingots used as money–Yuanbao, so dumplings symbolize wealth.

Therefore, it is said that eating dumplings on Spring Festival Eve will bring you good luck. Some families hide a coin in one of the dumplings, and the person who find or bite it will be the luckiest one in the New Year.

The other reason why people in northern China eat dumplings is according to its Chinese pronunciation “jiǎozi”. In China’s traditional timing system, after midnight, the first hour is called “zǐshí”, and this hour marks the beginning of the Lunar New Year. The pronunciation of “jiǎozi”(dumpling) is similar to “jiāo zǐ” (meaning auspicious). In general, dumplings should be made before mid-night on Spring Festival Eve, which is when the whole family get together to enjoy the hot dumplings. What a delightful picture!

No responses yet

Jan 24 2009

Qing Ceremony Performance Held to Celebrate New Year

Published by admin under Beijing Today

An actor who is dressed as a Qing Dynasty emperor walks during a performance in Beijing January 23, 2009. The performance adapting the ancient ceremony of the Qing dynasty emperors to pray for good fortune will be held daily during the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year celebrations in Beijing’s Temple of Heaven.

2009012401

No responses yet

Jan 23 2009

Chaoyang Temple Fair

Published by admin under Attractions

Dates:  January 26 – February 1
Venue: Chaoyang Park, Chaoyang District
Admission: 10 yuan
To get there: Bus routes 31, 302, 705, 731, 750, 752 or 852 to Chaoyang Park (Chaoyang Gongyuan).

Chaoyang Temple Fair is actually called, Chaoyang International Carnival. Another foreign-style temple fair in Beijing, the 2006 Changyang International Carnival will offer performances by renowned bands from the UK and Russia.

People can also go skiing, play games, and enjoy the food of various countries. This year’s carnival will cooperate with local charity organizations so that people will be able to contribute to society while enjoying themselves with the diverse entertainment.

No responses yet

Next »

Search