Beijing citizens will not be allowed to park at Olympic venues
as part of government plans to discourage the use of private cars
during the 2008 Games, local media reported on Monday.
The authorities in China's capital, which has an official
population of 15 million and notoriously congested traffic, are
considering a series of measures to keep a significant number of
the city's 3 million cars off the roads during the Olympics.
"Beijing will do its best to reduce the personal use of vehicles
during the Olympics," Beijing News quoted the Beijing Traffic
Commission's deputy director, Liu Xiaoming, as saying.
The surging number of new cars in the capital, with 1,000 more
hitting on road everyday, was always a lurking danger, which some
experts warned might paralyze the capital's transport system during
the Olympics.
"To ensure traffic smoothness during the Olympics, Beijing will
reduce traffic flow by 20 to 25 percent before the Olympics," Liu
told a forum.
"Thus we will be able to ensure traffic conditions that will be
almost the same as currently," Liu was quoted as saying.
Citing the examples of Sydney and Atlanta, Liu said that Beijing
would follow suit by banning citizens driving private cars to
Olympic venues.
"There won't be parking lots for private cars around the
venues," he said.
Yu Chunquan, deputy director of Beijing Traffic Management
Bureau, said ticket holders for the Olympic Games, the number of
which is expected to reach 7 million, could take a free bus to the
venues using their tickets.
Besides a special traffic management centre, which will be in
charge of traffic co-ordination during the Games, Beijing will also
open 210 kilometres of special Olympic traffic lanes connecting
different sites to ensure officials and athletes will arrive on
time for events.
(China Daily September 19, 2006)