First--a report from the BBC News website:
Beijing Olympic Bird's Nest ready
The main venue for
The 91,000-seat stadium will host the Olympics' opening and closing ceremonies as well as athletics events.
A network of steel girders gives the stadium its nest-like appearance. All 37 venues for the Games are now ready.
The International Olympic Committee has praised
The Bird's Nest - or National Stadium - was designed by award-winning Swiss firm Herzog and de Meuron and Chinese architect Li Xinggang.
The design beat dozens of other entries in a worldwide competition held in 2003.
"The Bird's Nest is the last completed Olympic venue but the best," said project manager Tan Xiaochun.
The project was completed at a cost of $500m (£250m).
"You can imagine yourself to be an athlete, standing at the centre of the venue attracting thousands of eyes," said Li Xinggang.
"You will be turned on by the audience's cheers, feeling at the centre of a stage. It will lead you to final success."
Interesting. Glosses over MANY important factors of the stadium, such as one of the original designer, contemporary Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei, who has chosen not to be associated with the project anymore, well I guess BBC is doing what he asked...but also the air quality concern, which they seem to just throw in there! Oh, by the way, air quality might be bad, but look how pretty! Now here is a report I found from Al Jazeera (am I going to be on some kind of list now that I'm posting an Al Jazeera report?):
I hope to see more reporting like this in the future. BBC, you've let me down.
So when you're watching, if you do, Olympic coverage this year, just remember this guy:
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