ABOUT WORLD BLOG

NBC News World Blog aims to provide a dynamic look at world events and trends -- both big and small -- from NBC News correspondents, producers, and bureaus around the world. Online entries -- from text to video -- will explore news events and how they are shaping our world.

Regular contributors include NBC News correspondents, producers and staff based in bureaus across the world and on assignment.

Click here to read more about the journalists behind NBC News World Blog.



3 million tons of steel remaking Beijing

Posted: Wednesday, January 16, 2008 7:49 AM
Filed Under:

By Adrienne Mong, NBC News Producer

We were on our second pass of the eastern edge of Beijing National Stadium, aka the "Bird's Nest," in the Chinese capital.

"What? Which gate?" Lao Guan, our driver, shouted into his cell phone as he reversed the minivan a second time. "This whole street has changed the past month!"

I could understand his frustration. A native who can count back to at least three family generations born in Beijing, Guan knows this sprawling city inside out. But these days he finds himself regularly stumped by its wholesale physical changes.

Image:  Construction around the Bird's Nest stadium.
Adrienne Mong/NBC News
Construction around the Bird's Nest stadium. 

Our contact at the Bird's Nest construction site had arranged entry for us through the northern gate. But the northern gate Guan knew was no longer there. Instead, there were several other entrances buried in the morass of fences, upended pavement, piles of rubble, temporary workers' housing units, earthmovers, and trucks.

The swift construction of the Bird’s Nest is emblematic of Beijing's sprint towards the Summer Olympics.

Ready, set, go…
It's impossible to know how many building sites exist in Beijing right now, but consider how many there are just for the Olympics: 31 stadiums and 45 training centers are being built for the Summer Games, according to the 2008 Project Construction Direction Office.

Adrienne Mong/NBC News
The construction site of the CCTV headquarters building in January 2007. 

The resources required for all the construction is almost as much a feat as the building and rebuilding. A conservative estimate, according to the China Business News, puts the total demand for steel for Beijing's makeover at 3 million tons – that could build the equivalent of 50 Empire State Buildings. 

The Bird's Nest stadium alone required 110,000 tons. The steel towers that make up the splashy new headquarters for CCTV, China's state television network, weigh somewhere around 50,000 tons. 

Image: CCTV headquarters building
Adrienne Mong/NBC News
The CCTV headquarters building seen here in October 2007. 

A steady supply of manpower also underpins this boom town. Municipal authorities said in December that Beijing's population is now more than 17 million,  a big jump from the population of nearly 15 million in 2005. 

Of that total, more than 5 million are considered "migrants" by the Ministry of Public Security – many of whom are energizing the capital's construction boom. They can be found all over Beijing's construction sites. On a quick visit to the Bird's Nest stadium alone we met people from the surrounding provinces of Hebei and Henan.

This is not the first time Beijing has been remade.

Beijing: Back to the future
The "northern capital" has had more than its fair share of makeovers over the centuries, but the parallels to the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) are especially notable.

According to the book "Beijing: From Imperial Capital to Olympic City," that era saw incredible growth with parallels to the city’s current transformation.

"After 1421, Beijing more than ever became a magnet for people, goods, and services. Population increases during the Ming era, reach[ed] near one million at its highest point in the mid-fifteenth century....  The surplus entered the market. Growing commercialization fostered greater social mobility and a less tightly controlled population."    

Sounds mighty familiar, no?

Image: CCTV's nearly completed new headquarters
Adrienne Mong/NBC News
CCTV's nearly completed new headquarters seen in December 2007. 

"The impulse to remake the city and to use all possible resources to project the image of power and authority…that was a motive the Mongols had, and of course, quite a lot of the Ming emperors," explained Alison Dray-Novey, professor of history at the College of Notre Dame of Maryland, who co-authored "Beijing" with Lillian Li and Haili Kong.

Of course, there's one key difference.

"In the present context, you have competing forces of the state and globalization and economic interests," noted Dray-Novey, as opposed to earlier times when the government truly controlled the city’s destiny. Now, "whether the state can actually control the outcome is more in question."

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

I thought westerners have more respect for other people's privacy, but here are so many people want to tell the Chinese what they should do. I think they'd better pay attention to their own business, since America has a lot of its own trouble now. The Chinese are capable of taking care of their own business, and they have the ability to learn from other nation's lessons. They have the most competitive students in the world.
By the way, someone there said that Tibet should be an independent country no matter the fact that it was acquired by Ginkoskan since Yuan Dynasty. According to this logic: United States should give back to indigenous Indians, and Australia should do the same as well... And, I dont know how America argue for Isreal's legal identity in the world, since it has only 65 years history, and it is still the cause of instability of that region.
So, I guess you guys just dont want to see the Chinese have some peaceful happy life, but this can not make you guys more competitive. Watch your own business, and work harder, guys!
Bunch of B.S. The Chinese are jacking up prices WORLD WIDE.
Any U.S. Company that wants to export American J.O.B. to China should be banned from selling here in the U.S.A! They give us their cheap goods that we have to replace like 10 times then in top of that GAS/FOOD skyrockets. I prefer American Made and durable than Chinese made and risking I get polluted!!!
The bird's nest is Australian made! Thats forward thinking engineering!
For zippie: Americans have no right to criticise China about pollution. It produces only slightly less pollution than china, a recent event, but has a population 1/5 of China. Per capita, you guys aere the worst polluters.

Oh, and have you forgotten which was one of the two countries who REFUSED to sign the Kyoto protocol??
 All brought to you by your low to mid-class CHINA-MART shoppers.
TO ALL AMERICANS, JUST REMEMBER WHY BEIJING IS ENJOYING SUCH "ECONOMIC PROSPERITY" DESPITE HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE AND A WORLD CRUSHING DEMAND FOR LUMBER AND STEEL. THREE GORGES DAM AND MUCH OF THE FURNITURE CHINA PRODUCES FOR THE WEST IS MADE FROM RAINFOREST TIMBER OF OTHER COUNTRIES. OUR SHOPPING DOLLARS ARE LINING THE POCKETS OF THE CHINESE. ULTIMATELY THE CHINESE WILL PAY FOR NEGLECT OF THE ENVIRONMENT ALL ACROSS ASIA.
What a world we leave in.  The falling Of the US Empire and the Rising of the Chinese Dynasty.  I am glad to be here to see all these changes.

That is just a very old out dated and sad comment about china screaminginboise.  China will do like what the US has done dominate the World via Economy and corruption.  

Of cause China is the biggest polluter of world. but US is not far behind espically for a Developed country that loves to tell other countries what to do except signing of Kyoto.  Instead of shifting blame to china on the polution the US goverment all the Developed and developing countries should help with research into reducing or converting the polution into something that can be useful.
Diu Lee - one comment - in your dreams. China will never reach that objective. There economy will fall flat on its face with the rising energy cost. Then........ World War 3. To much greed around the world. Encluding China.
Our offices are directly across from the new CCTV building.  Over the 4 trips I made to Beijing this past year I watched this building grow.  My last trip was just before the two extensions from the towers were connected.  This is an amazing building.
I believe the Chinese people are a well discipline society. There is many attributive qualities America could learn from their ethics.
Despite negative publicized criticism- China welcomes the World to participate in Olympic Games and continues to grow.   Well Done!!
yea China is all that and a bag of chips.....try exspressing religious freedom or having an unauthorized church or home bible study then getting the crap beat out of you. Oh sorry who cares, look at the pretty building, I am a struct engineer and they are getting buildings up but I have seen them and doubt the safety. Very seldom see power tools on a job site. Step above Mexico....probably why they are coming to U.S. also. At least muslim extremist won't mess with them.  What would China china do if akbar flew into the Gin Mao? They would nuke'em, turn it into a glass parking lot and put up a Wal-Mart.      You can do alot of thing if you treat humans like fuel and fodder        
Problem is that all this growth simply increases Beijing's pollution and congestion and makes it even less livable.
It's funny how the really left bent people on here conceal who or where they are.  I have lived all over the world and find that most people share the same desires.  Have a family, provide for it and enjoy life.  I would agree that most Chinese people probably have respect for Americans just as you can see that most Americans have respect for what China is accomplishing.  
That said just as those of you who seem so anti-America have pointed out you have to look at that country's leadership (not the average person) to understand what the real motives are.  I think there are things to be concerned with as Eduardo pointed out.  As one of the Chinese writers wrote, China will be the center of the world.  For all of you peacnik gullable people you only have to review history to undestand that China considers it self the Center of the world... the middle kingdom, mid-way between heaven and earth and that is the POLITICAL stance that you have to be concerned with.  You complain about the cold war patriotism and political indoctrination, but it definately applies to the former communist nations.  They were masters of political indoctrination.  But you don't seem to have any opposition to their biased thought.  You just see them all as loving and beautiful... and that they don't have an agenda.  The Olympics are a HUGE propaganda compaign and it is obviously working.

 And for you Europeans who hate America so much you will no longer be the Center of the Earth as you have preached since the 1400's.  And what ever you complain about with the US, just remeber that your maurading around the world for 6 centuries created us.  You are the ones who can not get along.  Look at the EU, you have fought over the same borders for how many centuries?  And you still don't really get along or like eachother.  We had our civil war and are united.  Had it not been for WW I and WW II wee would proabably still be isolationists.  And then you are going to snub us... Also, it is our efforts during the Cold War that kept Europe free and that enabled the current opportunities in China and Russia.  But you forget that.
  I wish China and the Chinese well in their transition to a 1st world country.  I hope they will be positive trade and economic power.
  But most people in the world still seek to move to the US not the other way around, so we must be doing something right.  And for all of you na sayers, go move to China and see how you are treated if you try and live and work there on the local economy. Just like the illegal immmagrants in the US and you will see all of the racism from the Asian side.  
  I lived in Asia and have friends who are married to Asians and they were not readily accepted by their spouses' families.  Also, most of you probably do not speak chinese so you probably don't know what is being said behind your back/in front of you.
 And why is it alright to talk about the eroding traditions in china and not PC to talk about how tradiational American values and culture are being eroded... Typical leftwing double standards.  There is the evidience of the new world order.  The destruction cultural values across the board.  So we are to offended because the the chinese are losing there traditions but accepting because ours are disappearing?  That is crazy.
 On a final note, NOW_PAST drank the Kool-aide full strength and is an example of Chinese extremism.  I think America truly seeks to have a positive meaningful relations with China.  We are not living in the 1800's.
 It was the Europeans who had the negative impact durning the colonial period.  The Brits and the French are the one who were driving the opium trade.
China also, has a dark history of Colonial Rule and violence.  Ask the Koreans, the Vietnamese, Cambodia, and the other East Asian nations that no longer exist because they were assimilated.  Most of the history predates western concern or thought.  But Europe still views itself as the center of the world.


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=580375

Syndicate This Site

Add World Blog to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google

Interactive

Fight for Iraq
Learn more about the ethnic, religious and political power plays in and around Iraq during a briefing of the region led by NBC’s Richard Engel.