City kicked off the construction of the Fuzhou Ting on September
21

A four-member delegation from the City of Fuzhou, China, arrived
on September 16 and began working
with volunteers
in the community to construct a Chinese Ting (Pagoda) on the Chinese Garden and
Reconciliation Park site. This
project is supported by the City of Tacoma, volunteer contractors, and the City
of Fuzhou.
Lihuang Wung
from the Community and Economic Development Department reported on September 24
the progress of the construction: “After three pre-construction meetings (September 16, 17 and 20) and a
lot of discussion and preparatory work, we finally kicked off the construction
of the Fuzhou Ting on Tuesday, September 21. At 10:00 a.m., building
materials and tools shipped from Fuzhou in three 40-ft containers were
delivered to the job site and materials were inspected. The Fuzhou
Delegation, City staff and the contractor met on the site to lay out the
detailed plans and job sequences for the next few days.”
On Wednesday, September 22, work began at 7:00 a.m. The crew did
an inventory of all the materials, and returned some of the containers to the
shipping company. Evergreen, the Taiwan-based shipping company, has been
gracious to let the project team use the containers for an extended period.
The crew also surveyed and chalked the layout on the concrete
foundation where the Ting structure will sit on. Instead of the pink
powder line, snappers that are commonly used by carpenters here, the Chinese
used “Mo Dou”, which is a line snapper/dispenser with Chinese black
ink. Once snapped on, the lines will stay permanently, said the
delegation.
September 22 happened to be the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival (or the
Moon Festival), one of the three major traditional Chinese festivals (the other
two being the Chinese New Year and the Dragon Boat Festival). The
significance of the Mid-Autumn Festival is that it is the time for family
gathering or reunion. The Fuzhou guests were thousands of miles away from
home and spent more than 10 hours on the job site. For that, Theresa
Pan-Hosley, Chair of the Chinese Reconciliation Project Foundation, treated
them with a fine dinner at the Shanghai House in downtown Tacoma.
On Thursday and Friday, September 23 and 24, eight stone columns were
erected and four beams installed. The granite columns are 10-foot tall
and weigh at 3,000 pounds each. The major task for the next couple of weeks is
the installation of wood components (upper structure of the Ting). It
will be quite a sight to see the traditional Chinese craftsmanship demonstrated
by the Fuzhou technicians and performed by the local carpenters.

