Olympic gateway to the skies
Advertiser Staff
In February, Beijing plans to open its spanking new airport terminal. The Chinese capital's new gateway to the skies was shown to the world last week after a 3 1/2-year sprint to construct the world's biggest airport complex for the 2008 Olympics. With 245 acres of floor space, the huge Terminal 3 of Capital Airport is expected to strengthen its position as a transport hub. With 66 million passengers forecast next year, it will jump from the ninth- to third-busiest airport. Designed by British architect Norman Foster, the building has a spectacular glass wall entrance and high ceiling like Hong Kong's Chep Lap Kok. The bright colors found in the Forbidden City appear in its tapering red pillars and the brown-gold roof shaped like the back of a dragon. Building is expected to be finished by the end of this year.
— Chris Oliver
NEW YORK
HOMAGE TO CHRYSANTHEMUMS
Ozukuri, ("thousand blooms") is a single chrysanthemum trained to produce hundreds of simultaneous blossoms in a massive, dome-shaped array. Ozukuri blooms require at least 12 months to train and are planted in custom-built wood containers called sekidai. At The New York Botanical Garden's exhibition "Kiku: The Art of Japanese Chrysanthemums," visitors will see ozukuri, as well as ogiku- and kengai-style displays in the largest kiku exhibition seen outside of Japan, and the most elaborate presented by the garden in its 116-year history. Kiku is part of the garden's celebration of Japanese art and culture. Oct. 20-Nov. 18. The New York Botanical Garden, 200th Street and Kazimiroff Boulevard, Bronx. Ticket information: www.nybg.org.
— Chris Oliver
FRANCE
MAIS OUI! ROLLING ALONG IN PARIS
It started as a group of friends getting together to explore the city; now more than 10,000 roller-skaters gather at 10 p.m. at the Place Raoul Dautry in Montparnasse every Friday night for a three-hour thrash around the streets. About 30 police officers — on motorbikes or wearing inline skates — stop traffic and ensure the route is clear. The 18-mile route sounds energetic, but you can
always bail out halfway for a restorative pastis. This being Paris, things can get a little philosophical — organizer Pari-Roller calls the tour
"a space of freedom." It's free and takes place year-round, unless it's raining. See pari-roller.com (in French).
— Advertiser staff