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Related information about the 2008 Beijing Olympics

Introduction to the National Stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games

The main venue for the 29th Olympic Games is located in the Beijing Olympic Park, on the east side of the northern end of the Beijing city central axis. The construction area is 258,000 square meters and the land area is 204,000 square meters. During the 2008 Olympic Games, it hosted the opening ceremony, closing ceremony, track and field competitions, men's football finals and other events, with a capacity of 100,000 spectators, including 20,000 temporary seats.

Olympic Games

In the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the 28 major events and sub-events will remain unchanged. It is now one year away from the 2008 Olympic Games, and the competition events are basically determined.

According to the information of the International Olympic Committee, the Olympic Games events are divided as follows: major events (SPORT), sub-events (DISCIPINES) and minor events (EVENT).

Same as the Athens Olympics, the Beijing Olympics has 28 major events. These 28 events are:

Athletics

Rowing

Badminton

Softball

Basketball

Football

Boxing

Kayaking

Cycling

Fencing

Gymnastics

Weightlifting

Handball

Hockey

Judo

Wrestling

Aquatics

Modern Pentathlon

Baseball

Equestrian

Taekwondo

Tennis

Table Tennis

Shooting

Archery

Triathlon

Sailboating

Volleyball

Among them, some events have no sub-items. The most sub-items are water sports, including swimming, synchronized swimming, water polo and diving. . Although track and field does not have separate events, it does have 46 events, including 24 events for men and 22 events for women. It has the most gold medals among Olympic events. Next is swimming. Although there are no sub-items, there are 32 events, 16 for men and women each.

Rogge made the above remarks while attending the opening ceremony of the 10th China National Games in Nanjing. He said that although the competition is different from the other 28 major events in the Olympic Games, it is a major breakthrough for martial arts to enter the Olympic stage.

According to Wang Xiaolin, director of the Wushu Sports Management Center of the State Sports General Administration, Rogge talked about Beijing’s application to enter the Olympic Games during an interview with the media in Nanjing on the 13th. This is also the first time that Rogge said that martial arts will become a competition event in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. It also clarified the rumors that "wushu will become a performance event in the 2008 Beijing Olympics."

Beijing Olympic Games mascot - Fuwa

Fuwa (English: Fuwa, formerly known as Friendslies) is the mascot of the 29th Olympic Games held in Beijing in 2008, designed by Han Meilin. It was officially released on November 11, 2005, exactly 1,000 days before the opening of the Olympic Games.

Fuwa is the mascot of the 29th Olympic Games in Beijing in 2008. Its colors and inspiration come from the five Olympic rings, China’s vast mountains, rivers, lakes and seas, and people’s favorite animal images.

Fuwa conveys friendship, peace, a proactive spirit and the good wishes of harmonious coexistence between man and nature to children around the world. Fuwa are five cute and close friends. Their shapes incorporate the images of fish, giant pandas, Olympic flames, Tibetan antelopes and swallows.

Fuwa Beibei, Fuwa Jingjing, Fuwa Huanhuan, Fuwa Yingying and Fuwa Nini each have a catchy name: "Beibei", "Jingjing", "Huan" "Huan", "Yingying" and "Nini". In China, overlapping names are a traditional way to express love for children. When you put the names of the five dolls together, you will read "Beijing welcomes you" as Beijing's warm invitation to the world.

Fuwa represents the dreams and aspirations of the Chinese people. Their prototypes and headdresses contain their connection with the ocean, forest, fire, earth and sky. Their image design applies the expression method of traditional Chinese art to show the splendid culture of China.

Bringing blessings to every corner of the world China has a long tradition of conveying blessings through symbols. Each doll of the Beijing Olympic Games mascot represents a good wish: prosperity, joy, passion, health and good luck. The dolls bring Beijing's hospitality and blessings to all corners of the world, inviting people from all over the world to gather in Beijing to celebrate the 2008 Olympic Games.

The blessing conveyed by Beibei is prosperity. In traditional Chinese culture and art, the patterns of "fish" and "water" are symbols of prosperity and harvest. People use "carp jumping over the dragon gate" to imply success in career and the realization of dreams. "Fish" also means good luck and good fortune every year. The implication. Beibei's head decoration uses fish patterns from the Chinese Neolithic Age. Beibei is gentle and pure, a master of water sports, and complements the blue ring among the five Olympic rings.

Jingjing is a naive giant panda who brings joy to people wherever she goes. As China's national treasure, giant pandas are deeply loved by people around the world. Jingjing comes from the vast forest, symbolizing the harmonious existence of man and nature. The decoration on his head is derived from the lotus petal shape found on Song porcelain. Jingjing is honest, optimistic and full of strength, representing the black link among the five Olympic rings.

Huanhuan is the eldest brother among the Fuwa. He is a fire doll, symbolizing the Olympic flame. Huanhuan is the embodiment of sports passion. He spreads passion around the world and delivers the Olympic spirit of faster, higher and stronger. Everywhere Huanhuan goes, Beijing 2008’s enthusiasm for the world is overflowing. Huanhuan's head decoration is derived from the flame pattern in Dunhuang murals. He has an outgoing and unrestrained personality, is familiar with various ball games, and represents the red link among the five Olympic rings.

Yingying is a Tibetan antelope who is agile, agile and galloping. He comes from the vast western land of China and spreads the good wishes of health to the world. Yingying is the Tibetan antelope, a unique protected animal on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, and a manifestation of the Green Olympics.

Nini comes from the sky and is a flying swallow. Its creative shape comes from the traditional sand swallow kite in Beijing. "Yan" also represents Yanjing (the name of Beijing in ancient times). Nini brings spring and joy to people, spreading good wishes of "good luck to you" wherever she flies. The innocent, cheerful and agile Nini will make a shining debut in the gymnastics competition. She represents the green link among the five Olympic rings.

Olympic Games Emblem

The "China Seal·Dancing Beijing" emblem organically combines the zodiac seal, Chinese characters and the five-ring emblem, and is full of profound vitality. The land embodies the charm of the East and the West; the spirit of the Olympic Games is sublimated between the strokes.

"China Seal·Dancing Beijing" is no ordinary seal. She fills the biggest gap in the list of host cities in the nearly century-old history of the Olympic Games! She is the first step taken by the Chinese nation in the history of hosting the Olympic Games! She is the first interpretation of the Olympic Charter by Chinese civilization! She also has the largest number of people who have ever made a commitment to the Olympic Movement!

The French sculptor Rodin once said: "Beauty is everywhere. For our eyes, it is not a lack of beauty, but a lack of discovery." From a cultural and aesthetic perspective, appreciate her beauty and explore her profound connotations.

1. Chinese Seal

Chinese seals were called Xi, Seal, Bao, Zhang in ancient times, "Seal", "Seal", "Record", "Zhu Ji", " "Contract", "Guanfang", "seal", "talisman", "deed", "deposit", "stamp", etc. are various customary names that have appeared in history. Ancient seals were popular in ancient times. Their simple and naive style reflects people's understanding and pursuit of beauty in different eras, and is imbued with the profound and mysterious beauty of history. Among them, there is a type of seal with pictures in it, which is the Xiao-shaped seal.

Xiao-shaped seal is a seal form that existed in my country in the pre-Qin Dynasty. The Han Dynasty was the prosperous period of ancient zodiac seals.

The zodiac seals of that period include the "Four Spirit Seals", "Tiger Seal", "Deer Seal", "Phoenix Seal", "Fuxi Seal", "God Man Cao Seal" etc. Seal patterns; there are also various types of zodiac seals that reflect real social life, such as "Inspiration Seal", "Drumming Seal and Yu Seal", "Long Sleeve Dance Seal" and other seal graphics; there are also "Ox Plowing Seal", "Juggling Seal", Seal forms such as "Animal Taming Seal" reflect the life and entertainment scenes of the Han Dynasty people from different aspects.

According to relics and historical records, seals were widely used in our country as late as the Warring States Period. Initially, the seal was used as a certificate when exchanging goods in commerce, and it was also a mark of credibility. After Qin Shihuang unified China, the scope of use of seals expanded to a legal object representing the rights and interests of those in power, and it was a symbol of the power of those in power.

After you have a certain understanding of our country’s seals, if you try “China Seal·Dancing Beijing” again, you will find it even cuter. The strokes on her are like words but not words, like paintings but not paintings; the words are integrated into the paintings, and the paintings are included in the words; between the strokes, there is a graceful dance; in the dance rhyme, the pen and ink are indulgent; "Beijing 2008" written in bamboo slips and Chinese characters "It is even more permeated with the profoundness of Chinese calligraphy art. All this not only condenses the development trajectory of ancient Chinese seals drawn from words, but also explains the mainstream view of ancient Chinese philosophy striving for moderation. These, coupled with the red ink pad and giant square seal symbolizing China, have made "China Seal·Dancing Beijing" accumulate a large amount of historical information and rich cultural essence. No wonder the design director of the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games and a participant in the 2008 Olympic Games emblem One of them, Mr. Brad Copeland, saw "China Seal·Dancing Beijing" from many emblem designs and immediately said: "She is from China!"

2. Dancing Beijing

"China Seal·Dancing Beijing" is a metaphor for China's credibility and stability. As the emblem of a sports meeting, she also shows the vitality and charm of Beijing. Beijing is dancing, dancing with the rhythm of the times; Beijing is not only a famous ancient city rich in cultural traditions, but also a modern city rich in innovative spirit - this is another meaning of "China Seal·Dancing Beijing".

According to investigation, the dance pattern painted pottery basin unearthed in Shangsunzhai, Datong County, Qinghai, which is about 5,000 years old, is the oldest primitive dance image in my country known so far. On the inner wall of the pottery basin, there are three groups of dancers, with five people in each group dancing hand in hand.

There are nine sections of Daxia music and dance in ancient my country. During the performance, the actors wear fur hats and plain clothes, with a simple style. Wu music and dance in the Shang Dynasty were widely used in various sacrificial occasions. The emperor of Zhou Dynasty had the "Eight Yi" dance, and the Qin and Han Dynasties had special music and dance institutions. Zhao Feiyan at the end of the Western Han Dynasty was a well-known dancer. During the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, hedonism was very popular among the gentry class, and they sang and danced all day long. The Sui and Tang Dynasties were an era when dance was very prosperous, among which "The Dance of Colorful Feather Clothes" and "Hu Xuan Dance" were the masterpieces. The folk songs and dances of the Ming and Qing Dynasties are also very rich. Only the Han people have various titles such as Yangko, flower drums, tea picking, lanterns, Dalian incense, land boat racing, bamboo horses and so on. In modern times, traditional Chinese dance has regained its vitality and produced many excellent works, such as "Lotus Lantern", "Little Knife Club" and "Silk Road Flower Rain".

It can be seen that in every era of our country, dance has been inextricably linked with life. Our ancient ancestors performed various rituals and expressed various feelings along with dance, labor and sacrifice. We are hosting the Olympics for the first time. For such a world-wide event, we can certainly express it in the language of dance. The famous British abstract sculptor Moore said: "The most outstanding feature of all primitive arts is their vigorous vitality." It is this kind of vitality that we see in "China Seal·Dancing Beijing".

The humanoid pictures in "Chinese Seal·Dancing Beijing" seem familiar. This is the dance posture in the Dunhuang murals that has the same origin as the dance "Flower Rain on the Silk Road". The exaggerated body proportions and limb positions, stretched strokes and simple composition fully express the enthusiasm and heroism of Beijing people, while the unrestrained dancing fully heralds the future of Beijing. We seem to see a dancer full of enthusiasm and hope, passionate and energetic, cheering to those who cheer him.

Of course, what he danced was not only people's enthusiasm, he also "danced" the Olympic concept of "faster, higher and stronger" freely.

3. A monument in the emblem

To understand more about the reason why "China Seal·Dancing Beijing" is used as the emblem of an Olympic Games, it is necessary for us to analyze the emblems of previous Olympic Games. Make a general inspection.

Counting "China Seal·Dancing Beijing", 46 emblems have appeared in the history of the Olympic Games. In the nearly century-old history of the Olympic Games, the Olympic Games emblem has evolved from scratch, from complexity to simplicity, and the emblem design has embarked on a path from concrete to abstract. In the previous Olympic Games, the emblem had not yet appeared, and the visual image representing the image of the Olympic Games was often provided by posters. The initial emblem patterns mostly represented the regional symbols or sports images of the host country; later, emblems that combined regional and sports patterns were produced; and later, abstract patterns appeared.

The above changes in the emblem pattern are completely consistent with the imprint of Western painting schools. Leaving aside the older academic and religious painting schools that mainly focus on realism, just from the 19th century Romanticism (including Symbolism), Realism (including Naturalism) to Impressionism and later to Fauvism and Expressionism. , abstract art school, surrealist school and later postmodern school, the history of Western art has gone through a development path from "realism" to "abstraction" and then to "no theme". Regardless of aesthetic theory or art practice, abstract patterns are the patterns that best convey metaphorical meaning and are the patterns that best express ideas.

If "China Seal·Dancing Beijing" is regarded as a Chinese character "京", it is the first introduction of Chinese character glyphs in the history of Olympic emblems. Chinese characters are ideograms, a symbolic system of symbols. Every stroke in Chinese characters is full of metaphors for the atmosphere of life and the meaning of life. If "China Seal·Dancing Beijing" is regarded as a "human" painting, it is an outstanding application of Eastern painting expression techniques. Compared with the strict realistic methods in the West, Eastern paintings are more flexible and general in terms of space requirements, allowing virtualization and omission. But it is this kind of virtuality and omission that creates real and unlimited imagination space for the viewer. "Chinese Seal·Dancing Beijing" is a successful artistic practice that integrates Chinese calligraphy, seals, dance, painting art and Western modern art concepts. She expresses the ideas that people want to express, and also entrusts the ideals that people will ascribe to her. She belongs to China and the world. She will undoubtedly become an artistic monument in the history of the visual image of the Olympic movement.

"Chinese Seal·Dancing Beijing" stroke by stroke, each of its constituent elements carries the solemn Chinese cultural tradition and the exciting Olympic spirit, demonstrating advanced aesthetic concepts and high-spirited spirit. The passion of the times. What she brings to people is not only an unprecedented emblem in the history of the Olympic Games, but also another promotion of Chinese civilization in the history of world civilization.

Olympic Torch

The 2008 Beijing Olympics torch is 72 cm long, weighs 985 grams, has a burning time of 15 minutes, and a flame height of 25 to 30 cm at zero wind speed. It can be identified and photographed under any circumstances. In terms of technology, cone curved surface special-shaped one-time molding technology and aluminum corrosion and coloring technology are used. The fuel is propane.

The creative inspiration for the Beijing Olympic Games torch comes from the "auspicious cloud" pattern of "original origin, harmonious integration". The cultural concept of Xiangyun has a time span of thousands of years in China and is a representative Chinese cultural symbol. The design of the torch shape is inspired by traditional Chinese paper scrolls. Paper is one of China's four great inventions and was spread to the West through the Silk Road. Human civilization spread with the emergence of paper. The use of lacquer red originating from the Han Dynasty on the torch clearly distinguishes it from previous Olympic Games torch designs. The contrasting colors of red and silver produce eye-catching visual effects and are conducive to various forms of media communication. The upper and lower parts of the torch are evenly divided, and the auspicious cloud patterns and three-dimensional relief-style craftsmanship design make the entire torch elegant and gorgeous, with profound connotations.

The Olympic torch is a handheld torch approved by the International Olympic Committee and used for burning the Olympic flame. The Olympic torch is the carrier of the Olympic flame.

Starting from the 11th Olympic Games in 1936, each Olympic Games has produced a torch that embodies the cultural characteristics of the host country and meets high-tech requirements, and has become an important legacy of the Olympic movement.

The Beijing Olympics torch is 72 centimeters long, weighs 985 grams, has a burning time of 15 minutes, and a flame height of 25 to 30 centimeters at zero wind speed. It can be identified and photographed in both strong light and sunlight. In terms of technology, cone curved surface special-shaped one-time molding technology and aluminum corrosion and coloring technology are used. The fuel is propane, which meets environmental protection requirements. The torch shape is made of recyclable environmentally friendly materials.

Artistic and technical features of the Beijing Olympic Games torch:

The creative inspiration of the Beijing Olympic Games torch comes from the "auspicious cloud" pattern of "original origin, harmonious integration". The cultural concept of Xiangyun has a time span of thousands of years in China and is a representative Chinese cultural symbol. The design of the torch shape is inspired by traditional Chinese paper scrolls. Paper is one of China's four great inventions and was spread to the West through the Silk Road. Human civilization spread with the emergence of paper. The use of lacquer red originating from the Han Dynasty on the torch clearly distinguishes it from previous Olympic Games torch designs. The contrasting colors of red and silver produce eye-catching visual effects and are conducive to various forms of media communication. The upper and lower parts of the torch are evenly divided, and the auspicious cloud patterns and three-dimensional relief-style craftsmanship design make the entire torch elegant and gorgeous, with profound connotations.

The Beijing Olympic Games torch has reached new technological heights in terms of combustion stability and adaptability to the external environment. It can keep burning under strong winds of 65 kilometers per hour and heavy rain of 50 millimeters per hour. In terms of craftsmanship, it is designed using thin, high-quality aluminum alloy and hollow plastic parts, making it very lightweight. The lower part is sprayed with high-touch plastic paint, which feels comfortable and will not slip off easily. The Beijing Olympic Games torch is a product independently designed and developed by my country and has complete intellectual property rights.

The Beijing Olympic Games torch uses propane, a cheap and commonly used fuel. Its main components are carbon and hydrogen. After combustion, only carbon dioxide and water are produced, with no other substances and no pollution to the environment.

Beijing Olympic Games torch design and development process:

Beijing Olympic Games torch design research and planning work began in August 2005. Combined with the concept of holding the Beijing Olympic Games and analyzing the torch design experience of previous Olympic Games, the torch design concept, design requirements and creation method were determined. According to the characteristics of the torch industrial design, in order to achieve the perfect combination of art and technology in the design plan, with the approval of the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee Office Meeting, it was determined that the torch design plan will be dominated by artistic modeling, and the combustion technology and industrial design will be solicited at the same time, open solicitation and directional A creative method that combines commissioned creations.

On December 6, 2005, the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee held a press conference and issued a public invitation to solicit torch designs. As of February 28, 2006, the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee *** had received 847 entries submitted by design institutions and designers at home and abroad, of which 388 were valid entries.

After the preliminary evaluation and re-evaluation of the submitted works by the Beijing Olympics Torch Design Solicitation Activities, three works were selected and submitted to the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee Executive Committee for review in accordance with the provisions of the evaluation procedures. From June to August 2006, based on the principle of selecting the best artistic design and technical design plan, the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee Executive Committee reviewed and determined that the torch shape "Lucky Cloud" designed by the Innovation Design Center of Lenovo (Beijing) Co., Ltd. The artistic design plan for the 2008 Olympic Games torch. The internal combustion system of the torch designed and developed by China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation is the technical plan for the torch of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. It is determined that China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation will complete the shape and combustion system of the torch with the assistance of Lenovo (Beijing) Co., Ltd. The combined torch sample production work formed the complete design of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games torch, which was approved by the International Olympic Committee in January 2007.

The significance of China hosting the Olympic Games

1. China, the world's most populous country, has never hosted the Olympics. If the 2008 Olympic Games are held in Beijing, China, which has one-fifth of the world's population and 400 million young people, the Olympic ideal and spirit will be more widely popularized and developed.

2. It has the economic strength to host the Olympic Games.

Beijing is a city with great development potential. Its economy has been growing at a double-digit rate in the past decade. In 1999, the city's GDP was US$24 billion, and its per capita GDP was more than US$2,000.

3. Excellent sports performance. It has won gold medals and ranked fourth in the total number of medals in the past two Olympic Games. So far, Chinese athletes have won 1,317 world championships and broken world records 1,026 times.

4. Political stability and social stability. Among the world's major capital cities, Beijing has one of the lowest criminal crime rates, traffic fatalities, and fire rates. The city's security guarantees are capable of hosting large-scale sports events.

5. Brilliant culture. Beijing has a history of 3,000 years as a city and 800 years as a capital. It has many historical sites and rich cultural heritage.

6. Rich experience in organizing large-scale sports events. Beijing not only successfully hosted the 11th Asian Games in 1990 and the 6th Far Southern Paralympic Games in 1994, but also won the right to host the 21st Universiade in 2001.

7. A beautiful Olympic Park is being designed. Beijing is building an Olympic Park in the northern part of the city with the most beautiful environment, covering an area of ??1,215 hectares. It includes a main stadium that can accommodate 80,000 people, 14 sports venues, an athletes' village and an international exhibition center. Together with 760 hectares of forest green space, it will be very suitable for Athletes compete and rest.

8. First-class communications, transportation, hotels and other social service facilities. Beijing has 344 star-rated hotels and 72,000 guest rooms (sets), with a reception capacity of 400,000 during the Olympic Games. The Capital Airport has an annual passenger capacity of 35 million passengers, and its routes connect to any country or city in the world. .

9. Central government support. On May 8, 2000, Premier Zhu Rongji said: The Chinese government fully supports Beijing's bid for the Olympic Games and will create good conditions for Beijing's bid in all aspects.

10. Strong public support. According to a household survey of Beijing citizens conducted by an independent survey company, 94.6% of citizens support Beijing's bid to host the 2008 Olympic Games.

Beijing 2008 Olympic Games medals

The Beijing 2008 Olympic Games medals are 70 mm in diameter and 6 mm thick. The front of the medal shows the pattern uniformly prescribed by the International Olympic Committee - the Greek goddess of victory standing with wings and the Greek Panathinaiko Arena. The back of the medal is inlaid with a jade jade shaped like an ancient Chinese dragon pattern, and the Beijing Olympics emblem is engraved on the metal graphic in the center of the back. The medal hook evolved from the traditional Chinese jade double dragon Pu pattern Huang. The entire medal is noble and elegant, with strong Chinese characteristics. It not only reflects the praise of the winner, but also vividly interprets the value of the Chinese nation that compares "jade" to "virtue" since ancient times. It is the embodiment of Chinese civilization and Olympic spirit in the image landscape project of the Beijing Olympic Games. Another "combination of Chinese and Western".

Beijing 2008 Olympic Games medal design inspiration:

The hook design evolved from my country’s traditional jade double dragon Pu pattern Huang,

The jade inlaid design on the back was inspired by Ancient Chinese jade.

The design of the jade inlay on the front of the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games medals is inspired by the shape of ancient Chinese jade, with the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games emblem in the middle; the color of the jade changes with gold, silver, and bronze medals. They are: white jade, green white jade, and green jade. The back of the medal features the emblem of the International Paralympic Committee and the names of the sports, as well as "Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games" in Chinese, English and Braille. The medal hook evolved from the traditional Chinese jade double dragon Pu pattern Huang. The medals for the Paralympic champion and runner-up are made of pure silver, and the championship medal must be plated with no less than 6 grams of pure gold. Beijing Paralympic medals have jade embedded in them. This design not only complies with the relevant regulations of the International Paralympic Committee, but its design creativity and shape also echo the Beijing 2008 Olympic medals, reflecting the equality between able-bodied people and disabled people and mutual respect for each other. Respect, whether it is an Olympic medal or a Paralympic medal, has the same value and supreme honor, and is the best embodiment of "One World, One Dream".

Beijing Olympic Games Slogan

Beijing Olympic Games Slogan - One World One Dream

"One World One Dream" (One World One Dream), It embodies the essence and universal values ??of the Olympic spirit - unity, friendship, progress, harmony, participation and dreams, and expresses the common desire of the whole world to pursue a better future for mankind inspired by the Olympic spirit. Although humans have different skin colors, different languages, and different races, we all share the charm and joy of the Olympics, and we all pursue the ideal of human peace. We belong to the same world, and we have the same hopes and dreams.

"One World One Dream" profoundly reflects the core concept of the Beijing Olympics and embodies the core and core values ??of the three major concepts of "Green Olympics, Science and Technology Olympics, and Humanistic Olympics". The harmonious values ????contained in the soul of the humanistic Olympics. Building a harmonious society and achieving harmonious development are our dreams and pursuits. "Unity of man and nature" and "harmony is precious" are the ideals and pursuits of the Chinese people for the harmonious relationship between man and nature and between man and man since ancient times. We believe that peace and progress, harmonious development, harmonious coexistence, win-win cooperation, and a harmonious life are the common ideals of the world.

"One World One Dream" is simple and profound, and it belongs to both China and the world. The slogan expresses the lofty ideals of the people of Beijing and China and the people of other countries in the world to share a beautiful homeland, share the fruits of civilization, and create a future hand in hand; it also expresses the greatness of a country with five thousand years of civilization that is making great strides towards modernization. The nation's firm belief in peaceful development, social harmony, and people's happiness; expressing the aspirations of the 1.3 billion Chinese people to contribute to building a peaceful and better world.

The English slogan "One World One Dream" has a distinctive syntactic structure. The two "One"s form a beautiful parallelism, and "World" and "Dream" echo back and forth. The entire slogan is concise, loud, and profound in meaning. It is easy to remember and easy to spread.

The Chinese slogan "One World, One Dream" expresses "One" as "the same", which makes the theme of "all mankind belong to the same world and all mankind pursue beautiful dreams together" more prominent .