BEIJING, July 15 -- Construction is due to begin on
Friday on the U.S. Pavilion for World Expo 2010 Shanghai.
United States Commerce Secretary Gary Locke will
attend the groundbreaking ceremony for the U.S. Pavilion on the last day of his
four-day visit to China, according to the U.S. Department of Energy Website. Locke
is of Chinese descent.
The U.S. Pavilion has received considerable public
attention after the nation last week gave its long-awaited Expo confirmation.
The U.S. government signed a participation contract with the Shanghai Expo
organizer last Friday, becoming the 240th confirmed participant to the event.
Construction workers have already begun
pre-construction preparations on the 5,600-square-meter plot reserved by the
Shanghai Expo organizer for the U.S. Pavilion, according to Xinhua news agency.
The U.S. Pavilion will be at the very west of the
Pudong section of the Expo site. The plot is regarded as a "golden area" as it
is close to one of the Expo entrances.
Thirty-six countries have confirmed they will build
stand-alone pavilions. Other nations will either rent a pavilion from the
organizer or share pavilions.
A dozen of the 36 countries have already begun their
pavilion construction as the organizer has urged all participants to begin work
as soon as possible. The six-month event opens in less than 300 days.
"We will be on time and schedule," Jose Villarreal,
the newly appointed commissioner general for the U.S. Expo effort, said last week
after signing the participation contract.
He said the American group has developed a detailed
timetable to build the pavilion but declined to say how long construction would
take.
The organizer has said a stand-alone pavilion usually
needs about five months to be completed.
The U.S. Expo team is not only struggling with time,
but also money.
The U.S. group has raised about half of the 61 million U.S.
dollars needed to build and run the pavilion, but is optimistic it will obtain
the rest.
Construction and fundraising will proceed
simultaneously, said Ellen Eliasoph, co-chair of Shanghai World Expo 2010 Inc,
the non-profit company that is undertaking the funding, design, construction and
operation of the U.S. Pavilion.
Corning signed on yesterday as the ninth sponsor of
the U.S. Pavilion.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)