Van Kerckhove held a big party inside his Beijing Hotel room in the 1980s (above). He also used his room for storing boxes for the Pingdingshan power station project. Photos Provided to China Daily |
He has also since become a key consultant on Beijing's urban construction. His contribution to the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games is especially notable.
As a result of his close long-term cooperation with the Beijing municipal government, van Kerckhove was recommended in 2001 to participate in the preparations for the Beijing Olympic Games. He became an investment promotion delegate for Olympic projects with the Beijing Municipal Commission of Development and Reform, mainly assisting in the decisions to construct large-scale Olympic venues.
When the SARS epidemic hit Beijing in the spring of 2003, for a time, preparation meetings for the Beijing Olympic Games were even moved to van Kerckhove's home and his favorite Belgian restaurant for convenience.
Van Kerckhove calls himself a "lobbyist" for Beijing and a "bridge" between the Chinese administration and foreign businesses for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
He received the 2005 Friendship Award - the highest honor for foreigners in China from the Chinese government, for his significant contributions to the Olympic Games in Beijing.
Looking back, van Kerckhove admits he had not expected to stay so long when he first arrived. In the early 1980s, China was a different country, van Kerckhove says. Life was both exciting and restrictive for a foreigner.
Foreigners were only allowed to stay in hotels, and van Kerckhove used his Beijing Hotel room as an office and the occasional party space.
He remembers the come-and-go of cargos for the Pingdingshan project which filled his room with piles of boxes. He remembers the mouth-watering smell of grilling hamburgers, which was not allowed in the room but which he and some friends had sneakily done from time to time.
Last but not least, he remembers the grand view of the Forbidden City from the window of his hotel room, which made the hotel-room-office unparalleled.
Not even his current three-story home office in downtown Beijing can have the same vista.
A life by the wall | Life of Guo |