The stadium can seat as many as 91,000 spectators during the Olympics. The capacity will then be reduced to 80,000 after the Games. It has replaced the original intended venue of the Guangdong Olympic Stadium[citation needed]. The stadium is 330 metres long by 220 metres wide, and is 69.2 metres tall. The stadium uses 258,000 square metres of space and has a usable area of 204,000 square metres. It was built with 36 km of unwrapped steel, with a combined weight of 45,000 tonnes. The stadium has some 11,000 square metres of underground rooms with waterproof walls. The stadium will cost up to 3.5 billion yuan (≈423 million USD).
China stadium nears finishing line
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By James Reynolds
BBC News, Beijing |
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![]() The stadium took 52 months to build and cost 3.5b yuan (£250m; $494)
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You cannot miss it – it looks like a giant pile of grey spaghetti, ready and waiting just in case Gulliver decides to drop by for lunch.
Beijing’s new Olympic Stadium – known here as the Bird’s Nest – is meant to catch your eye and preferably keep it as well.
While it was being built, security guards stopped outsiders from getting in to have a look.
But this morning, for the first time, foreign reporters were allowed in to have a peep.
As you walk into the stadium, you notice the finishing touches.
The lamps along the pathways are designed to look like mini bird’s nests.
Trees have been planted, and workers are busy laying down fresh turf.
Volunteers in white T-shirts point you through concrete tunnels.
The home straight
![]() Zhang Qiong
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Inside the Bird’s Nest itself, everything is almost ready.
Numbers have been painted onto the red and white seats.
Some of the seats are covered in dust – others have just been washed.
But there is one set which is still covered in plastic – the V…V…VIP section – right in the centre of the middle tier, in front of the home strait.
At the opening ceremony on the 8th of August, all attention will be on this section.
It is at this point that we will finally be able to tell which presidents and prime ministers have decided to come, and which have decided to stay away.
But none of that matters much to the volunteers inside the stadium.
“This is a big event for my country,” says Zhang Qiong, who is a 19-year-old archaeology student from Beijing University.
“I hope it will be successful. And I feel that it is my duty to make a contribution. I think the Bird’s Nest is great. Chinese people respect grand buildings.”
Flags raised
At one end of the stadium, workers practise one of the most important moments of any Games – the bit when the medal-winners’ flags are raised to the top of the pole.
![]() The volunteers are very proud of the new stadium
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On this occasion, they practise with the Chinese flag.
They get it to the top each time.
On the athletics track, two men walk slowly along one of the lanes, laying out markers every metre or so, checking that everything complies with international standards.
At the end of the home straight, a man in a black T-shirt stands next to a red box.
Inside the box, you can see a red beam. This is the photo-finish equipment.
It is set up exactly where the finishing line will be.
But there is one more thing to do. Someone has to paint the actual white line across the track.
Once that is done, the stadium should be ready for business.








