Skip to main content
BBC SPORT / OLYMPICS & OLYMPIC SPORT
Graphics Version | BBC News Home
Sport Homepage | Olympics | Football | Cricket | Rugby Union | Rugby League | Tennis | Golf | Motorsport | Boxing | Athletics | Snooker | Horse Racing | Cycling | Disability Sport | Other sport... | Sports Personality | TV/Radio Schedule | 606 | Sport Academy | Fun and Games | Inside Sport | Northern Ireland | Scotland | Wales
Friday, 1 February 2008, 12:33 GMT

China unveils 'Water Cube' venue

French coach Claude Fauquet at the test event at the National Aquatic Centre in Beijing Beijing Olympic officials have officially unveiled the bubble-wrapped National Aquatics Centre.

Nicknamed the "Water Cube", the imposing £72m venue is clad in a honeycomb of transparent cushions and was funded by overseas donations.

Li Aiqing, president of the company behind construction, said: "The whole project is complex and unique.

"After five years of effort, we are very, very happy. It is one of the biggest swimming centres in the world."

The cushions in the outer layer of the building comprise over 100,000 square metres of ETFE (Ethylene Tetrafluoroethylene), a plastic with a melting-point of 275C.

No fewer than 6,700 tonnes of steel and 1,300 tonnes of welding rods were also used in the construction.

606: DEBATE
What do you make of the Water Cube?

But the venue, which will have a 17,000 capacity, has an early safety problem which needs fixing, after a crack was spotted on a diving platform.

A total of 42 gold medals will be won at the venue in swimming, diving and synchronised swimming. After the Olympics and Paralympics, a quarter of the venue will be retained for competition with the rest used for leisure purposes.

The centre staged its first test event, the China Open swimming competition, on Thursday, 31 January, three days after opening, although swimming superpowers Australia and the United States only sent observation delegations.

The second showpiece venue of the Games, the neighbouring 91,000-seater National Stadium, or "Bird's Nest", is scheduled for completion by the end of March.



E-mail this to a friend
Related to this story:

Beijing venues - China's question marks (10 Dec 07 |  Olympics & Olympic sport )
What do stadiums say about us? (07 Nov 07 |  Magazine )
London scales down 2012 pool plan (27 Nov 06 |  Olympics 2012 )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
Latest on Team GB qualification
Sport-by-sport qualification from the British Olympic Association
BBC coverage of Beijing
Beijing 2008
London 2012
BBC London's 2012 coverage
International Olympic Committee
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



SEARCH BBC SPORT: 

Sport Homepage | Olympics | Football | Cricket | Rugby Union | Rugby League | Tennis | Golf | Motorsport | Boxing | Athletics | Snooker | Horse Racing | Cycling | Disability Sport | Other sport... | Sports Personality | TV/Radio Schedule | 606 | Sport Academy | Fun and Games | Inside Sport | Northern Ireland | Scotland | Wales

^ Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | Feedback | Help | ©