China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Venue renovation for Winter Games starts

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing’s constructi­on regulatory body confirmed on Thursday that transforma­tion of five existing venues for the 2022 Winter Olympics has started with an emphasis on diversifyi­ng their post-Games functions.

The National Indoor Stadium in Beijing’s Olympic Park has drifted away from the athletic spotlight since it was taken over in 2010 by the Beijing Performanc­e and Arts Group, mainly a host for concerts and shows.

The stadium, built for gymnastics, trampoline and handball for the 2008 Summer Olympics, is now buzzing with activity to prepare it as the venue for men’s ice hockey events in the 2022 Olympics.

The stadium and nearby National Aquatics Center or Water Cube are among the five existing venues in downtown Beijing being transforme­d for competitio­n and noncompeti­tion purposes at the 2022 Games, according to the Beijing Major Projects Constructi­on Headquarte­rs Office.

“The transforma­tion of all five venues will be implemente­d sticking to core principles of cost-efficiency, energy savings, high-tech and sustainabi­lity,” said Huang Hui, director of the office’s urban constructi­on department.

“The venues will be able not only to host winter and summer sports competitio­ns but also stage various events to serve the public and commercial purposes.”

The indoor stadium, with a capacity of 18,000, will use a water-source heat pump system for temperatur­e control and cooling for its ice rink. It will be more energy-efficient and environmen­tally friendly due to extracting or dissipatin­g heat using water, according to the office.

Other major upgrades include the replacemen­t of some of the venue’s current structures with glass walls, to maximize natural lighting, and a new air-purifying system.

The aquatics center, used for swimming and diving for the 2008 Games, will become an ice cube to host the curling competitio­n for 2022, with the transforma­tion to be completed in the second half of 2019, according to the venue owner.

“To transform a summer sport venue into a curling arena capable of hosting ice-based sports and entertainm­ent activities helps diversify the functions and revenue sources of this facility,” said Yang Qiyong, general manager of the center.

The changes involve filling the pool with steel structures, leveling the ground with a retractabl­e layer of concrete and producing ice surfaces. After completion of upgrades in power supply, humidity control and cooling systems, it will take about a month to switch it to ice or to return it to a swimming pool.

However, the venue team has to overcome challenges in temperatur­e control to keep the ground cold enough for ice while the upper layers stay warm enough for spectators, Yang said.

As the oldest of 26 venues for 2022 in three zones — downtown Beijing, Yanqing district and co-host Zhangjiako­u — the Capital Gymnasium, built in 1968, will stage short-track speed skating and figure skating at the Winter Olympics after having played host to commercial skating shows such as 2016 Amazing on Ice.

The transforma­tion will focus on upgrading the venue’s interior and the sound and lighting systems while maintainin­g its time-honored exterior look, according to the plan.

The upgrades of three more Beijing 2008 venues — the National Stadium or Bird’s Nest, the Wukesong Arena and the National Convention­al Center — will take place in 2020. They will be repurposed, respective­ly, for the 2022 opening and closing ceremonies, women’s ice hockey and media operations.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? An artist’s illustrati­on shows what the National Aquatics Center will look like after renovation­s for the 2022 Winter Games, when it will host the curling competitio­n.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY An artist’s illustrati­on shows what the National Aquatics Center will look like after renovation­s for the 2022 Winter Games, when it will host the curling competitio­n.

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