channelnewsasia.com - IBM builds online version of China's famed Forbidden City
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

IBM builds online version of China's famed Forbidden City
Posted: 11 October 2008 0516 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

SAN FRANCISCO - IBM on Friday opened online doors to a virtual version of the famed Forbidden City in China that served for centuries as an exclusive realm for the nation's emperors.

The US technology colossus spent more than three years working with Chinese officials and the Palace Museum to construct an interactive, animated replica of the 178-acre (720,000 square-metre) walled fortress in the Dongcheng District of Beijing.

"Forbidden City: Beyond Space & Time," online at www.beyondspaceandtime.org, is billed as a first-of-a-kind, fully immersive, three-dimensional virtual recreation of "this Chinese cultural treasure."

"The rich cultural heritage of China's imperial past, embodied in the Forbidden City for over five centuries, is now brought to life and accessible to all through a virtual world," said Henry Chow, chairman of IBM's Greater China Group.

"This initiative takes the online experience to a new level of innovation with rich content, educational storytelling, community and social networking features that represent the next generation of 3D Internet applications."

Built in the early 14th Century, The Forbidden City served as home to the emperor and the political heart of Chinese government from mid-Ming Dynasty to the end of the Qing Dynasty.

The Forbidden City is now overseen by the Palace Museum and Friday marked the 83rd anniversary of it being open to the public as a cultural attraction.

Visitors to the virtual Forbidden City can explore it as animated characters, or "avatars," able to chat with others or take part in activities such as archery, cricket fighting, or a board game called Weiqi.

Animated tourists can also scrutinize artifacts and scenes including "The Emperor Having Dinner." Virtual tours can be narrowed to topics such as dragons, halls, symbolic animals, or the expansive Imperial Garden.

"The Forbidden City: Beyond Space & Time is a program that combines China's world-class cultural heritage with state-of-the-art information technology," said Palace Museum director-general Zheng Xinmiao.

"This programme is only a start, which, as we believe, will have an unlimited future to explore China's traditional culture."

Computer kiosks in the real Forbidden City allow people there to visit the virtual version as well.

Other "cultural heritage projects" by IBM include the Vatican Library, the Piet? Eternal Egypt and the Hermitage Museum.

- AFP /ls

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Yudhoyono holds aces as Indonesia goes to polls
SKorean military on watch for NKorean missile launches
Japan mulls new missile defence system
North Korea boasts of military strength
Thai minister faces charges over airport seizure
No alternative to talks on N.Korea nuclear programme
UN chief chides Myanmar over Suu Kyi issue
NKorean ship reportedly sails home after being tracked by US
NLD says Ban's failure to meet Suu Kyi is "great loss"
Five dead, 34 wounded in Philippine church bombing
Japanese voters go to polls in key test
Two US soldiers, seven Afghan police die in blasts
China's President Hu leaves for G8 summit
Flooding kills eight in northern Vietnam
US Marines in fierce battle during Afghan offensive
Australian navy investigating sex bet allegations
Malaysian authorities seize 'Viagra coffee'
Taliban claims to down Pakistani helicopter
Beatings spark fears for Bangladesh's tigers
Bodies found from Indonesian plane crash
Slum tours give hard dose of reality in Indonesia

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions