The Borneo Post

China’s 2008 Olympic mascots: where are they now?

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BEIJING: Face down in the dirt with an iron post impaling his rump, Chinese Olympic mascot Huanhuan has seen better days.

Once a proud talisman of the 2008 Beijing games, the character – a traditiona­l Chinese “good luck” doll whose fiery headdress symbolised the Olympic torch – now lies in a field outside an unfi nished mall started during the pre-game constructi­on boom.

He is one of six large mascot statues on the premises who have fallen down and out in the eight years since the high of the capital’s enthusiasm for the games.

Photograph­ed weeks before the 2016 Olympics open in Rio, the mascots are a reminder of the high costs of hosting the event. Their derelict state reflects the challenges that China has faced in finding new uses for its Olympic investment­s, with many venues falling into disrepair and some constructi­on projects left incomplete.

China sealed its place on the world stage as an emerging superpower in the 2008 Games, which were estimated to have cost the country around $ 40 billion.

Beijing’s willingnes­s to spend big helped it win a bid last summer to host the 2022 winter Games, beating a string of European cities that withdrew due to public concerns over costs.

The capital wi l l be the only city in sporting history to host both summer and winter Olympics.

Today, venues such as the Bird’s Nest, which cost 3.6 billion yuan to build ($ 486 million at 2008 rates) and the nearby Water Cube, with its bubbled ex t er ior and 1 . 3 billion-yuan price tag, remain underused. They mostly play host to curious tourists, as few events can fill their massive capacity.

But they and nine other venues from the 2008 Games will be re-used in 2022.

When strung together, the five Olympic mascots’ names – Beibei, Jingjing, Huanhuan, Yingying and Nini – spell out “Beijing huanying ni”, Chinese for “Beijing welcomes you”.

Designed to represent the five elements of Chinese philosophy and embody some of the country’s most popular animals – Jingjing has panda-like features, while Yingying looks vaguely like a Tibetan antelope – they were once ubiquitous images across the city.

Also hiding in the weeds was a two metre- tall rendering of Paralympic mascot Fu Niu Lele, a multi- coloured cow whose name was chosen to bring good luck.

It’s not clear if Beijing is planning a Winter Olympics comeback for the formerly fab five, but for the time being, they remain little more than a distant memory. — AFP

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