Beijing National Stadium

National Stadium
国家体育场·鸟巢
Bird's Nest
Exterior view of the stadium
Interactive map of National Stadium
Full nameNational Stadium
Location1 National Stadium South Road, Beijing, China
Capacity91,000
Executive suites140
SurfaceGrass, All-weather running track
Record attendance89,102 (NigeriaArgentina Olympic football match, 23 August 2008)
Public transit  8   15  Olympic Park
 8  Olympic Sports Center
Construction
Broke ground24 December 2003 (2003-12-24)
Built2003–2008
Opened28 June 2008 (2008-06-28)
Construction costCN¥2.3 billion
ArchitectHerzog & de Meuron
ArupSport
China Architectural Design & Research Group
Ai Weiwei (Artistic consultant)
Structural engineerArup
Tenants
China national football team (selected matches)
China women's national football team (selected matches)
China national basketball team (2009–2010)
Website
n-s.cn
Beijing National Stadium
Simplified Chinese国家体育场
Traditional Chinese國家體育場
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinGuójiā Tǐyùchǎng
Wade–GilesKwóchiā T'ǐyǜch'ǎng
Yale RomanizationGwójyā Tǐyùchǎng
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationGwok gà Tái yuhk chèuhng
JyutpingGwok3gaa1 Tai2juk6coeng4
Southern Min
Hokkien POJKok-ka Thái-io̍k-tiûⁿ
Alternative Chinese name
Simplified Chinese鸟巢
Traditional Chinese鳥巢
Literal meaningBird's Nest
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinNiǎo Cháo
Wade–GilesNiǎo Ch'áo
Yale RomanizationNyǎu Cháu
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationNíuh Chàauh
JyutpingNiu5 Caau4
Southern Min
Hokkien POJChiáu Châu

The National Stadium (国家体育场, Guójiā Tǐyùchǎng), a.k.a. the Bird's Nest (鸟巢), is a stadium at Olympic Green in Chaoyang, Beijing, China. The National Stadium, covering an area of 204,000 square meters with an 80,000 person capacity (91,000 with temporary seating), broke ground in December 2003, officially started construction in March 2004, and was completed in June 2008.

The National Stadium is owned and operated by a partnership company between Beijing Municipal State-owned Assets Management Co Ltd (58%) and CITIC Group (42%).

The stadium was designed for the 2008 Summer Olympics and Paralympics. It was also used during the 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics.