The museum is a white building with simple and clear lines. The entrance is very unique. It is modelled on the ancient temple of Zeus in Olympia. In front of it, there are two rows of eight marble columns. They are from Sassos Island, Greece. They are presented by the Greek government and are said to be the whitest marble in the world. Two of them are engraved with the names of the hosting years and cities of the previous Olympic Games and Winter Olympic Games. One bears the names of successive IOC presidents. Apart from many exhibits, the Olympic Museum has a wall in the hall built of blocks of marble. These marbles have different names. There are libraries and audiovisual rooms in the museum, so that visitors can have a deeper understanding of the Olympic Games, a sacred sports competition. For visitors, through many documentary competitions at the time of the film and multimedia, to reproduce the style of each Olympic Games, athletes'joy and sorrow, success and failure, as well as the applause of numerous audiences, visitors seem to experience the scene, it seems to be exciting and moving. The museum is a white building with simple and clear lines. The front is covered with two layers of white marble, which is pure white and symbolizes peace and "Faupuley" sportsmanship. Marble comes from Thasos Island in the north of the Aegean Sea. Its white represents purity and dove of peace. It is a symbol of the Olympic spirit. The museum is modern style and shows the simplicity and eternal purity together with the ancillary buildings that show the origin and spirit of the Olympics. If you are interested in sports, you have to visit the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, which is the world's largest information centre for Olympic competitions. It organically combines sports, art and Olympic culture through various exhibitions from ancient Greece to the present, such as arts, documents, films and souvenirs.