The marina that hosted the 2008 Olympic sailing regatta on Fushan Bay — rows of yachts, the Olympic flame tower, and a whole bay of CBD towers that turn into a giant light show after dark. Free to walk, any hour of the day.
Picture this: you're out on Lover's Dam (情人坝) at six in the evening. On one side is the open water of Fushan Bay; on the other, a hundred white yachts moored in the marina, a small red lighthouse at the tip of the pier, and a sea breeze coming off the bay. Then the sky goes dark, and half the CBD skyline around the bay starts to light up at once, as if it were one enormous screen. That's the moment Qingdao locals come back for, night after night.
This is the Qingdao Olympic Sailing Center, or 奥帆中心 — a 45-hectare marina on Fushan Bay in Shinan district that hosted the Beijing 2008 Olympic sailing regatta and Paralympic events. Built on the former Beihai shipyard, it's now a seafront district with a world-standard yacht harbour, the Olympic flame tower, a set of giant Olympic rings, a sailing museum, and a waterfront promenade that runs all the way to May Fourth Square (五四广场).
What makes it worth a stop is simple: it's free to walk, 24 hours a day, with no ticket queue. Visitors say the real draw is watching the yachts and the skyline by day, then staying for the light show after dark — all in one place — and, if you're up for it, taking a sailing trip out onto the bay.
Walk out from the plaza toward the water — everything here is within strolling distance
A breakwater turned into a promenade that juts out into the sea, with a small red lighthouse at its tip — a favourite photo spot. Cafés, bars and seafood restaurants line both sides (locals call the strip Passion Bar Street), so you can nurse a drink while you watch the yachts and the sunset. Visitors rate it one of the best places to catch the bay light show.
The flame tower lit during the Olympic sailing regatta still stands by the water, and nearby a large set of five-colour Olympic rings makes an easy photo against the skyline across the bay. This is the spot that tells the story of how a former shipyard became one of the city's landmarks.
A world-standard yacht harbour that has hosted big races like the Volvo Ocean Race and the Clipper Round the World. Sailing boats and speedboats run daily from morning until sunset (weather permitting). You can book a trip out onto the bay — but visitors warn to skip the touts who push tours at the pier and book through a platform with a clear price instead.
After dark, more than 30 skyscrapers around Fushan Bay light up in sync into a single screen nearly 3 kilometres wide. It starts around 19:30 in summer (April–October) and 19:00 in winter (November–March), and loops every 30 minutes until about 21:00. Watch it free from Lover's Dam or from May Fourth Square right next door.
The marina connects to May Fourth Square (五四广场) by an easy seafront promenade, so you can do both in one trip — see the red "May Wind" spiral sculpture at the square, then walk back to the marina for the yachts and the light show, all in one evening.
Start from the plaza in front of the center and walk out along Lover's Dam to the red lighthouse at the end. It's a short, easy stroll — about 20–30 minutes to cover — but stop to photograph the yachts, grab a coffee by the water or wait for the sunset and you can happily lose an hour. The sea breeze out here is strong, so a light windbreaker makes it more comfortable.
The hour visitors love most is late afternoon into the evening, because you get the sunset behind the marina and then stay for the light show in the same spot, with no second trip.
The marina runs sailing boats and speedboats out onto the water daily from about 09:00 until sunset (depending on the weather and the on-site schedule), giving you a different view of Qingdao from the middle of the bay, with the CBD towers lined up along the shore. Prices depend on the boat and the time slot — a private yacht charter runs around ¥600 per hour (about ฿3,000), while shared per-seat sailing trips cost less.
Good to know: visitors warn that there are plenty of touts pushing boat tours at the pier. The safe move is to check and book ahead through a platform with a clear, listed price.
The Fushan Bay light show is the highlight you shouldn't miss: more than 30 skyscrapers light up together into a moving image nearly 3 kilometres wide. It starts around 19:30 in summer and 19:00 in winter, looping every 30 minutes until about 21:00. The best vantage points are the tip of Lover's Dam, where the towers reflect off the water in three dimensions, and the viewing deck at May Fourth Square.
On a public holiday the railings fill up fast, so arrive 15–30 minutes early to claim a spot, and watch your phone and belongings when you lean over the rail to shoot. If you'd rather skip the crowds, try the Third Bathing Beach boardwalk to the east — quieter, and you still see the show.
The easiest way is the metro, which drops you close to the marina — then it's just a short seafront walk.
The CBD district along Fushan Bay and May Fourth Square — walk out of your hotel and follow the seafront to the marina