Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • The red lantern is the classic emblem of China.

  • In ancient times,

  • they were used to mark the entrances of houses and they soon became

  • a sign of joy and festivity.

  • At Chinese New Year, lanterns represent the light of hope.

  • Back in the 1960s, the people of Harbin couldn't afford traditional

  • lanterns to celebrate New Year,

  • so they froze water in buckets, put candles inside,

  • and the ice Festival was born.

  • Using light as a symbol of celebration has continued through

  • to the modern festival today.

  • Almost every one of over 2,000 buildings here

  • has its very own light display.

  • The lighting design is almost as epic an endeavour as building the

  • festival itself.

  • The logistics involved in making this happen are staggering.

  • The sheer scale of the operation

  • means the Festival needs 230,000 metres of electrical cables.

  • That's 13.8 million individual lights.

  • But creating such a vast electrical system demands meticulous attention

  • to detail to withstand such extreme conditions.

  • And this is how they do it.

  • The lights are actually individual LEDs

  • housed within a resilient silicon strip.

  • These aren't your standard household LEDs.

  • A team of engineers have specifically designed ones

  • to withstand the freezing temperatures.

  • OK, it's more expensive than a conventional light bulb,

  • but it is more eco-friendly. Plus, can you imagine

  • the bill to pay the electricity at this place?

  • Each block of the ice is hand chiselled to create a groove

  • for the LED strip.

  • The blocks are then lined up in a brick wall pattern.

  • The great thing about LEDs is they emit less heat.

  • What you don't want within an ice block is a block melting.

  • Now, you need to join the bricks together. Traditionally,

  • and especially in your home, you'd use something like cement.

  • But here in Harbin they use something completely different.

  • Water. I've kept it in my coat to try and keep it liquid.

  • Very simply, pour the water on,

  • and I literally only have a few seconds to get the next brick on top

  • before the water freezes.

  • The idea being that those two then fuse together and it becomes a solid

  • structure. A bit more Harbin cement...

  • Now the moment of truth. Hook some batteries up to my LEDs

  • and in theory I'll be able to illuminate

  • this beautiful piece of work.

  • Of course, there's a slightly bigger switchbox for the main event.

  • Each individual light is painstakingly turned on by hand,

  • row by row,

  • building by building, and I get to turn on the very last building.

  • So, which switch is it? This one here?

  • Three, two, OK!

  • There it is. A little bit of Russia in the middle of China.

  • The ice city is developed across an entire year by a team of architects,

  • and lasts just three months.

  • This is the chief designer.

  • How does it make you feel that

  • everything that you've created here is gonna melt?

The red lantern is the classic emblem of China.

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級

人們在冰雪仙境中慶祝 ? ?- 中國新年 - BBC (People celebrate in ice wonderland ?? ? - Chinese New Year - BBC)

  • 8 1
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字