Archive for January 9th, 2009

Beijing Olympic – Expansion of Tianjin airport finishes for Olympic Games

Friday, January 9th, 2009

The airport at Tianjin, a city neighboring Beijing, has completed its largest expansion project to cater to the needs of next year’s Olympic Games, airport sources said on Tuesday.

The new terminal building was five times larger than the old one and was able to accommodate 10 million passenger arrivals and departures annually, the sources said.

More than 300,000 officials, athletes and visitors for next August’s Games were expected to travel via the airport. The expanded parts were scheduled to be operational in May.

The expansion, with a total investment of nearly 3 billion yuan (409.5 million U.S. dollars), started in August 2005, three years before the Games opened. It included a new 116,000-square-meter terminal building, a 270,000-square-meter apron and a 62,000-square-meter parking lot.

The runway was also widened to 75 meters from the current 50 meters and lengthened 400 meters to 3,600 meters.

After expansion, the airport would have a mail-handling capacity of 500,000 tons and could accommodate 200,000 flights annually.

Tianjin is about 120 kilometers southeast of the capital.

Track laying was completed on the intercity high-speed railway between Beijing and Tianjin last week. It would be put into use before the Games and shortened the journey between the two cities from the current 70 minutes to around 30 minutes.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

Chinese Pinyin – bi (辟)

Friday, January 9th, 2009

辟  [pì, pī, bì]

国标码:B1D9 部首:辛 笔画:13 笔顺:5132514143112
monarch
royal
(Source: dict.cn)

China Travel – Baisikou Twin Tower

Friday, January 9th, 2009

The Baisikou Twin Tower is located in Baisikou of Helan Mountain, 45 kilometers northwest of Yinchuan City in the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.

The Baisikou Twin Tower is the only brick tower with a double-eaved roof in Ningxia. Built on the south slope and running through Baisikou path, the two facing towers are 100 meters from east to west.

The east tower is octagonal in shape, with each side measuring about 2.5 meters. The tower has 13 stories and is 45 meters high. Except the first floor, which is tall, the rest floors decrease in height gradually. Two beast-headed figures are embossed on each side of the tower under the eaves of each layer. To the south of the tower gate is a 2-meter-by-50-centimeter path leading inside. The rooms are round with floors separated by thick, hollow, wooden structures. The west tower has 14 stories and is similar in shape to the east tower. Except for the first floor, each of the eight sides of each layer has a niche carved in the middle of the outer wall containing a standing Buddha statue. Both sides of each niche are decorated with beast-headed embossments with a pearl in the mouth.

The Buddhist temple originally built between the two towers has been destroyed. Although there is no record of when the twin tower was erected, the remaining cultural relics indicate that it was probably built around the Western Xia Dynasty (1038-1227).

(Source: chinaculture.org)