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Reality of Urbanization Catching up to the Dream
China Digital Times ^ | 21 March 2017 | Sophie Beach

Posted on 03/27/2017 10:31:09 AM PDT by Lorianne

China’s ambitious urbanization plan is getting results: the country now has 102 cities housing more than one million people. The drive to move investment and infrastructure west to develop poor inland regions has had mixed results and created so-called ghost cities, in which the infrastructure and high rises are built but the residents don’t come. To reverse that trend, three local representatives at the recent National People’s Congress argued that urban planners should focus less on building skyscrapers and more on providing services and creating jobs for the displaced residents.

The Guardian this week looks at the urbanization of China from various perspectives. Reporter Tom Phillips revisits newly developed Lanzhou New Town, in Gansu Province, which he last visited in 2013 when it was still under construction. He now writes:

Reality took a while to catch up with the dream. When I first visited in 2013, as villagers came to terms with the destruction of their once-remote rural homes, an eerie hush gripped the city’s almost completely empty streets. The relentless din of car horns – a trademark of urban China – was completely absent. Dozens of tower blocks were under construction but, aside from builders, there was hardly a soul to be seen. Both Chinese and foreign journalists who flocked to the city came away convinced it was a flop.

Returning four years later, however, I found this sleeping western giant appears to be slowly awakening as housing projects begin to fill up and pioneers start to move in.

“People are buying property and moving in,” insists Shepard, who has visited the city twice. “As improbable as it sounds, it’s kind of coming to life. The place is almost like a mirage out in the middle of the desert. You see it glimmer on the horizon. You see it but you don’t really believe it is there – and then all of a sudden you are in the middle of it.”

City officials declined to be interviewed by the Guardian about their progress in luring humans to the region’s lunar landscape. But during a government propaganda tour last year, Xu Dawu, Lanzhou New Area’s deputy Communist party secretary, claimed it had already attracted 150,000 permanent residents as well as 40,000 construction workers who were temporarily living there.

Those numbers seem wildly inflated with huge swaths of the city still completely vacant.

SNIP


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Miscellaneous
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1 posted on 03/27/2017 10:31:10 AM PDT by Lorianne
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