• <nav id="c8c2c"></nav>
      • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
      • <tfoot id="c8c2c"><noscript id="c8c2c"></noscript></tfoot>
      • <nav id="c8c2c"><sup id="c8c2c"></sup></nav>
        <tr id="c8c2c"></tr>
      • a级毛片av无码,久久精品人人爽人人爽,国产r级在线播放,国产在线高清一区二区

          .contact us |.about us
        News > Lifestyle News ...
        Search:
            Advertisement
        Grand Theater to further diversify style of China's first avenue
        ( 2003-12-22 14:56) (People's Daily)

        If all goes as planned, sometime next autumn, Beijing's Chang'an Avenue, an area of architectural history spanning 600 years, will herald an unusual egg-shaped French-designed Grand Theater, further adding to its diversity.

        The talk surrounding the building becomes noisier as the last girder of the steel framework of the theater was hoisted last week.

        "Driving along the avenue will be even more amazing," said Martin Paske, an American architecture student who has been doing an internship in China for over a year.

        "In five minutes, you get to see the glorious red-walled imperial Forbidden City, the century-old French-style Beijing Hotel, the solemn Great Hall of the People that can trace a Russian element and clusters of modern North American style plazas."

        The 6.7-km Chang'an Avenue, known as the "First Avenue of China", is the axial line running east to west that cuts through the heart of Beijing, stretching from Fuxingmen to Jianguomen, flanked with at least 50 magnificent buildings.

        "Lying behind the architecture is China's increasing acceptance of foreign concepts," said Prof. Dong Guangqi, advisor to the Beijing Municipal Institute of City Planning & Design. "The rapid transformation of city skyline features a kind of cultural documentary of an era."

        Prior to the founding of new China in 1949, the cream-colored French-style Beijing Hotel built by colonists in 1900 was the landmark construction of old Beijing, standing out from rows of Chinese courtyards (siheyuan), on the then 3.7-km Chang'an Avenue.

        Following the founding of new China, Chinese architecture tended to blend a Russian style with traditional Chinese elements, exemplified by the Great Hall of the People, opposite the Forbidden City.

        "The great scale and structure of the Great Hall of the People employs Russian style, but the decoration patterns on the marble poles and colored glazed tiles are a variation of traditional ancient Chinese style," said Dong Guangqi.

        Domestic architects have explored new ways to express their ideas on Chang'an Avenue, producing the Cultural Palace of National Minorities in the north of the avenue.

        In the past two decades, as China became more open to the outside, a host of modern architecture has filled both sides of the street.

        The Oriental Plaza, at the intersection of the business street "Wangfujing" and Chang'an Avenue is a complex with distinctive glassy exterior design.

        The Headquarters of the Bank of China, was designed by AmericanIeoh Ming Pei, a prestigious Pritzker Prize laureate whose noticeable works include the expansion project of Louvre Museum.

        Jean-Marie Duthilleul, with the French AREP design company who designed the Xidan Bookstore, chose the Forbidden City as his favorite work along Chang'an Avenue.

        "The Forbidden City is a masterpiece that generations of architects have tried to learn from and follow," he said. "I never expected to be privileged as the chief designer for a building that stands on this avenue."

        The design for the National Grand Theater has drawn attention worldwide. 44 entries from 36 designing institutions, including 20from overseas, participated in the bid.

        Beijing residents selected three designs in a five-day public review and passed the result to the evaluating committee composed of professors from top universities and government officials, who finally chose the one designed by French architect Paul Andrew.

        Andrew was excited to find that Beijing was "brave enough" to accept his bold modern design. "It reflects a new outward-looking China."

        "Elliptical architecture is likely to tone in with its surroundings", with traditional buildings as the Forbidden City built in the 15th century and modern buildings such as the Great Hall of the People, said Andrew.

         
        Close  
           
          Today's Top News   Top Lifestyle News
           
        +Shenyang gang leader sentenced to death
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +US report wrong as religious rights safe
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +China's rise on world stage no cause for worry in US
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Ministry to tighten land allocation
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Ministries push for direct links
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Grand Theater to further diversify style of China's first avenue
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Bicycles still rule, but less popular in China
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Prehistoric oriental 'Venus' carved on cliff discovered in Ningxia
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Lessons in safe sex
        ( 2003-12-22)
        +Santa arrives, Christ missing
        ( 2003-12-22)
           
          Go to Another Section  
             
         
         
             
          Article Tools  
             
           
             
           
                .contact us |.about us
          Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved