Expo 2010, officially theExpo 2010 Shanghai China, was held on both banks of theHuangpu River inShanghai, China, from 1 May to 31 October 2010. It was a majorWorld Expo registered by theBureau International des Expositions (BIE), in the tradition of international fairs and expositions, the first since 2005.[1] The theme of the exposition was"Better City – Better Life" and signifies Shanghai's new status in the 21st century as the "next greatworld city".[2] TheExpo emblem features the Chinese character世 ('world', Chinese "shì") modified to represent three people together with the 2010 date. It had the largest number of countries participating and was the most expensive Expo in the history of the world's fairs. The Shanghai World Expo was also the largest World's Fair site ever at 5.28 square km.[3]
By the end of the expo, over 73 million people had visited – a record attendance – and 246 countries and international organizations had participated.[4] On 16 October 2010, the expo set a single-day record of over 1.03 million visitors.[5]
Shanghai has been one of the main cities envisioned to host the expos for some time. Many scholars have written about the possibility and made suggestions in books. Unofficial participation in fairs outside China have happened since 1851. In 1910, theQing dynasty decided to host China's first fair with theNanyang Industrial Exposition inNanjing (then usually spelled Nanking).[6]
In 2004,the Chinese central government established the Shanghai World Expo Organising Committee as the organization dedicated to host the event. The Organising Committee set up an executive committee which is responsible for the execution and management of expo affairs. Besides, the Shanghai World Expo Coordination is founded for the daily affairs of the executive committee.[8]
The site of the event was theNanpu Bridge–Lupu Bridge region in the center of Shanghai along both sides of theHuangpu River. The area of the Expo 2010 covers 5.28 km2.[3]
After winning the bid to host the Expo in 2002, Shanghai began a monumental task to reshape the city. More than $48 billion[9] was spent for the preparation, more than the cost of cleaning up Beijing in the preparations for the Olympics in 2008. Shanghai began clearing 2.6 square kilometres along the Huangpu River; that involved moving 18,000 families and 270 factories, including the Jiang Nan Shipyard, which employs 10,000 workers.
Six new subway lines were opened between 2008 and 2010; four thousand brand new taxis were added in the month before Expo 2010 opened and the city's buildings along the river were decorated with more energy-efficient LEDs.[citation needed]
During the expo, the expo site was crowded with national pavilions, sculpture gardens, shops, a sports arena and clam-shaped performing arts centre.[citation needed]
Shanghai trained more than 1.7 million volunteers and adopted Olympic-level security measures, adding metal detectors to subway entrances and screening cars entering the city.[citation needed]
The Shanghai Expo also featured an online version of the expo grounds featuring 3D renderings of the expo grounds, and a 3D version of the pavilion interior and offerings.[citation needed]
The Shanghai World Expo provided an unparalleled opportunity for the tourism industry. During 2010's Spring Festival, Shanghai received 2.79 million tourists, an increase of 12 percent from the previous year, resulting in record high numbers of visitors. Overall Shanghai's tourism revenue achieved an increase of 13 percent year on year during Spring Festival, resulting in RMB 2.1 billion in total revenue.[10]
Flags of participating countries waving in front of the China pavilion.
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192 countries and 50 organizations registered to participate in the Shanghai World Expo, a record number for that time.[citation needed]
Over 73 million people visited Expo 2010 during the 184-day event, breaking the previous record of 64 million visitors set byExpo 70 inOsaka. Organizers had expected 70 million visitors at the start of the expo. About 5.8 percent of the visitors, or 4.25 million, were foreigners.[11]
Shanghai spent 11.964 billion yuan in operating cost to host the event, making it the most expensive World Expo ever, but the organizers still made an operating profit of more than 1 billion yuan (US$157 million) thanks to the record attendance. The total revenue was 13.014 billion yuan, including 7.36 billion yuan in admission fees and almost 4 billion yuan in sponsorship income. However, the city invested another 19.74 billion yuan to prepare and construct the 5.28 square kilometer site, exceeding the budget of 18 billion yuan.[11]
The opening ceremony was held in the evening of 30 April 2010 attended by dozens of world leaders.[12] The ceremony consisted of an indoor and outdoor component.Jackie Chan,Lang Lang, andAndrea Bocelli were among the performers in the indoor component. The event featured an outdoor display offireworks, lasers, and dancing fountains after a performance by singers and dancers.[13][14] The outdoor ceremony was produced byDavid Atkins Enterprises. 6,000LED balls were floated into theHuangpu River representing fish. Organisers called the outdoor show "the largestsearchlight display in history, the largest collection of multi-colouredlaser firepower ever assembled in one place, the world's largest LED screen, one of the largest dancingwater fountains ever, and the "largest light show ever attempted"."[15]General Secretary of the Chinese Communist PartyHu Jintao inaugurated the opening of the Shanghai World Expo.
The official theme songs of the Expo were "City" byJackie Chan and "Better City, Better Life" byQuincy Jones.
The promotional song of the Expo was "Right Here Waiting for You 2010" (Chinese:2010等你来;pinyin:èr líng yī líng děng nǐ lái).[18] Released during the 30-day countdown on 1 April, Right Here Waiting for You 2010 was plagiarized from the 1997 Japanese song "Sonomama no Kimi de Ite" ("Stay the Way You Are") byMayo Okamoto. This resulted in its use as the Expo theme being suspended. After discussions with Okamoto's management, a compromise was reached such that "Sonomama no Kimi de Ite" is now the official song of the 2010 Expo[19]
The theme song for the Shanghai World Expo for the Chinese culture was "The World Watching China", sung by Chinese singerHan Geng.
The theme song for Norway was "Powered By Nature" which was composed byRolf Løvland and performed by his groupSecret Garden.[20] The song was recorded for their 2011 albumWinter Poem.
Haibao was the mascot of the Shanghai Expo 2010. It means treasure of the sea and was based on the Chinese character for man or person, "人". Some said that Haibao resemblesGumby,[21] but the expo's secretariat said that it was an original design chosen through a competition and that they had never heard of Gumby.[22]
The main building – called "Expo Axis" – has the world's largest membrane construction[23] and was built by SBA (architects) andKnippers Helbig (structural engineers). The building consists of some steel-glass funnels with a1,000 m long membrane construction. The main construction was completed at the end of 2009.[24]
There were five central theme pavilions at the Expo 2010, exploring different aspects of urban development. They were calledUrban Footprints,Urban Planet,Urbanian,City Being, andUrban Future.[25]
Corporate pavilions included: Aurora Pavilion,Broad Pavilion, China Railway, China State Shipbuilding Corporation Pavilion,Coca-Cola Pavilion, Cisco Pavilion, Information and Communication Pavilion, Oil Pavilion, Japanese Industry, PICC, Private Enterprises Joint Pavilion, Republic of Korea Business, SAIC-GM Pavilion, Shanghai Corporate Joint Pavilion, Space Pavilion, Space Home Pavilion, State Grid and Vanke Pavilion.[26]
The Urban Best Practice Area allowed cities and regions an opportunity to share experiences of improving urban living.[27]San Francisco (a Shanghai sister city) was one participant here,[27]as wereDafeng Town in Shenzhen, Hangzhou,Liverpool,London,Montreal, Rotterdam andSeoul.[28]
The Expo also included Chinese displays about Hong Kong and Ningbo.[citation needed]
The Expo introduced numerous urban best practices and concepts from all over the world which the organisers hope will be a lasting legacy for better urban life in China and around the world. It advocated for future development to focus on environmental sustainability, efficiency and diversity. The innovations and achievements of the event were summarised in the Shanghai Declaration issued by the participants of the Expo. The declaration also nominated the Shanghai Expo's closing day 31 October as "World Better Cities Day".United Nations Secretary-GeneralBan Ki-moon stated at the closing of the Expo, "Thanks to this Expo, millions of people learned about possibilities for making our cities healthier and safer, cities that better integrate nature and technology, cities that offer their citizens cleaner air and water, and better lives all around".[29]
Within Shanghai, the grounds of the former Expo site now constitute theExpo Park, including the former China Pavilion. TheBureau of International Expositions (BIE) and the Shanghai government have announced plans to construct the world's only official World Expo Museum in Shanghai, on the Puxi side of the expo site. Construction began in 2012, and the museum opened its doors on 1 May 2017.[30] More than 200 participants from Expo 2010 have donated over 30,000 exhibits to the future museum. The BIE has added into its formal requirements that all future Expo bidders shall support the new Expo Museum.[31]
The Shanghai Expo was touted by theChinese government as yet another first-rate global scale event, similar in significance to theBeijing Olympics, which would symbolise the economic and political rise of China in the 21st century. The event would demonstrate to both the Chinese populace and foreign nations the enormous progress of China's urban development in the heart of the nation's economic hub of Shanghai. The event received extensive media coverage in theChinese media both in the lead up and during the World Expo. According to China analyst Tom Doctoroff, "In terms of what the city was able to achieve, the Chinese were impressed. Shanghai stepped up a level in internationalization".[32] Outside China, the Expo propelled Shanghai onto magazine covers, newspaper front pages and television programmes at a time when it is laying the groundwork to become an international financial centre by 2020.[33]
A group of NGOs protested a month before the expo against the alleged displacement of 18,000 families in the Shanghai area in connection with the Expo.[34] DissidentFeng Zhenghu was detained in mid April 2010 for threatening to publicly seek redress for them in the courts.[35] According to the U.S. government-runCongressional-Executive Commission on China, Shanghai authorities used the expo as an excuse to conduct a surveillance, propaganda, and detention campaign against members of the bannedFalun Gong spiritual group.[36]
State employees were given free one-day vouchers to the expo, and according to one worker, threatened with wage cuts, in order to fulfill the target of 70 million visitors.[41] Long lines at the Germany pavilion caused visitors to shout "Nazi, Nazi" and attack workers, according to general commissioner for Germany's pavilion Dietmar Schmitz.[42][43] Free tickets to an expo show featuringK-pop groupSuper Junior caused a stampede that injured 100 people, which spokespersons for the expo and the Korean pavilion allegedly denied.[44]