The Pavilion for Sale

Published: 11 July 2000 y., Tuesday
Brightly yellow pavilion of Lithuania, by its form reminding a wing of the plane, has caused delights not only of public, but of the experts, too. All the internal constructions of a composition have the idea of a wing, of flight. And it is not by accident, because the main accent of an exposition is documentary film "Flight above Lithuania". It is shown in a cosy hall where the effect from acquaintance with a marvellous Lithuanian nature and architecture is strengthened with vibrating armchairs and the streams of air that imitate flight. There was also an idea to add aromas of the Lithuanian fields, but there were no means for doing that. During the first day 7000 visitors looked at "mini-Lithuania", and during the following one – 29 000 have visited it.

It is not surprising, that during construction of the pavilion hearings have appeared, that some firms would like to purchase it on completion of the exhibition. Having counted up, that dismantle of the exposition and its transportation to Lithuania will cost as much as its construction or even more, the authorities were likely to sell it. However, there was a lawful incident: as the pavilion is the property of the state, under the law competition on a privatisation should be declared. In this connection, instead of whether Lithuania will gape the buyer with all these formalities. Thus, the alarm has appeared, in such a situation Lithuania may loose the buyer.

At the session of the cabinet, which was held some hours before premiere A.Kubiljus left for Hanover, the government has made the decision to charge Minhoz to prepare the bill, allowing direct sale of the Lithuanian pavilion. The money obtained from its sale will return to Fund of export development from which construction was financed.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Developing nations in dire need

The financial crisis is having a serious impact on low-income countries. more »

EU drives G20 crisis action

The agreement was welcomed by the EU, which has led efforts to crack down on loose banking practices that caused the financial crisis. more »

AB Bank SNORAS group will acquire AB bankas “Finasta” and other companies of AB “Invalda” financial sector

On 31 March this year, the boards of AB Bank SNORAS and AB “Invalda” approved of the purchase and sales transaction of AB “Invalda” financial group's companies. more »

MEPs to vote to step up eco-labelling

MEPs will vote on Thursday 2 April on a first reading agreement on the voluntary EU Ecolabel (“EU flower”) system for environment-friendly products to become less costly and bureaucratic to use. more »

Credit rating firm says U.S. banking industry won't recover until 2010

The fourth quarter of 2008 was not so good for the banking industry, and the financial conditions of commercial banks and savings and loans is expected to further deteriorate for the rest of 2009 and the first part of 2010, according to LACE Financial Corp. more »

Europe's trade with developing countries: Who really benefits?

MEPs recently gave the green light to a new trade deal between Europe and Caribbean countries. more »

Verizon Business Deepens IP Capabilities That Enable Telework

New VoIP Features Boost Flexibility, Mobility, Cost Savings for Organizations Seeking to Untether Workers. more »

Revised GDP

According to the revised data, in IV quarter 2008, GDP at current prices made LTL 28578.8 million and against IV quarter 2007 decreased by 2.2 per cent. more »

Fisheries control: committee rewrites rules on recreational fishing

The EP Fisheries Committee rewrote the rules on recreational fishing in its consultative report, adopted Tuesday, on a proposed “control regulation” to ensure compliance with common fisheries policy (CFP) rules. more »

Trademark fees slashed

In a measure of the Union’s strong growth prior to the financial crisis, the demand for EU trademark rights has shot up in recent years, creating an unexpected budget surplus. more »