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Beijing 2008 Olympics 到北京看奧運 (Aug 2008)

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chin:
In July, my good friend Gary offered us tickets and hotel rooms to see the Beijing Olympics.

Although not much of a sports fan myself, I accepted the offer right away. How could I miss the chance to see the Olympics in persons!?

So Beijing, here we come!

chin:
Gary's company was a sponsor of the Beijing Olympics, and had tickets to a range of different events.

One of our goals for the trip was to see the different Olympic venues, specially the Bird's Nest and the Water Cube. So I asked for tickets for events take place in the various venues.

The first thing was to look at the rules and regulations at the back of the tickets, to find out if I can bring cameras to the event.

And I was happy to see that I can bring my camera as long as they are not professional gears & not for commercial use.

Well, they are not "professional gears", aren't they? :-)

chin:
In the years leading up to 2008, there were lots of hopes, hypes & expectations about what business the Olympic Games may bring to Beijing and China in general.

One of the highest expectations had to be in the hotel industry. I was told that there were 800,000 rooms in Beijing competing for the Olympic business.

But with the chaos caused by the pro-Tibet independent groups during the torch relay, the mainland authority substantially tightened the visa policy thus the number of overseas visitors was much lower than hoped.

The terror attacks in Xinjiang didn't help either, and may have caused lower than expected domestic visitors.

However, none of this mattered to the higher end hotels.

A friend of mine who works in Beijing and lives in the Grant Hyatt serviced apartment told me that Grant Hyatt was all sold out at more than 10 times the normal rate, and you cannot book the room for a few nights - you have to book for the whole 16-day Olympics period. With conditions like these, I imagine most bookings are made by companies entertaining their customers or executives.

Our hotel was the News Plaza Hotel, in the same building where Beijing Daily is located. All the rooms in this hotel were fully booked by 3 groups - my friend's company, UPS & the Beijing government.

The hotel is in a very nice location, across the street from Oriental Plaza, and very near Wang Fu Jing. The rooms are very spacious, but the carpets are stained in both rooms.

chin:
18-Aug-2008, our first day in Beijing.

We decided to take the short trip from our hotel to Tian An Men Square in the morning.

Unlike our previous trips to the Tian An Men Square, when the square was truly a huge open space and visitors could enter from any point, the Square now has only a handful of entry points completed with scanning machines and metal detectors.

My first visit to the Tian An Men Square was in 1986. At that time, not only visitors can enter the square from any direction, the Monument of the People's Heroes was freely standing and anyone can go up the 3 levels of stairs, to the base of the Monument and touch the stones.

Perhaps due to the Monument's central location in the Square, it has been the focal point of many "people's movement", such as the student protest in Jun 1989. Now the Monument is completely off limit.

The guards in this picture are guarding some special Olympic related displays.

chin:
Tian An Men (Heavenly Peace Gate) seen from the Square.

Behind the gate is the Forbidden City.

I learned later that we can now pay to go up to the Gate and see the Tian An Men Square from there. The next time I would definitely like to go up there, to check out the view Chairman Mao may had in 1949 when he declared the formation of the People's Republic of China

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