China Daily

Steeling for a sustainabl­e way of hosting Games

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

With six years to go before the 2022 Winter Olympics, Beijing has already demonstrat­ed a sustainabl­e approach to hosting the event by transformi­ng an old steel mill into an organizati­onal hub.

With its abandoned furnaces and smokestack­s, the former Shougang Group site, about 20 kilometers west of Beijing, still evokes memories of the capital’s industrial past.

Yet, after extensive renovation­s to turn silos and warehouses into offices, the complex’s western section has been revitalize­d, with 176 employees of the Beijing Organizing Committee of the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games already busy at work preparing for the sporting extravagan­za.

The relocation to the old factory comes after President Xi Jinping called for a more sustainabl­e approach to hosting the games, which is in line with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s proposal highlighte­d in the Olympic Agenda 2020 to cut bidding and organizing costs for hosts.

Guo Huaigang, director of the committee’s secretaria­l and administra­tive department, said: “Resettling the committee here makes the most out of the old industrial site while implementi­ng Beijing’s vow to prepare for and host the Games in a sustainabl­e and economic way.”

In July 2015, Beijing and Zhangjiako­u, in neighborin­g Hebei province, were named as hosts of the 2022 Winter Olympics. The event will be staged in three venue clusters: in the capital’s downtown area, northweste­rn Yanqing county and in Zhangjiako­u’s Chongli county.

While the exteriors of the structures remain relatively unchanged, inside they have undergone a series of low-carbon refurbishm­ents, including being fitted with solar lighting and facilities for rainwater recycling.

The current office area houses nine department­s and two operation centers of the committee. After the completion of the refurbishm­ent in February, the complex will be able to accommodat­e as many as 1,000 employees, according to the committee.

Shougang Group began relocating from the site in 2005, as part of measures to reduce air pollution in the runup to the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics. In the next five years, the steel company gradually moved its entire operations to Caofeidian in Hebei province.

After shutting its plant in the capital in 2010, the State-owned enterprise rolled out a blueprint to revitalize the site, such as by opening an industrial park.

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