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Building Big top 10 in China - People's Daily Online December 20, 2010
Editors' Note: China has a tradition of building big. Tracing back to the Great Wall and the splendid imperial palaces, the ancient Chinese were addicted to the massive impact created by building gigantic constructions.
China never stopped constructing, especially after the government injected four trillion yuan to the market to stimulate the economy two years ago. The country's people decided to let the tradition continue by building new construction wonders in the cradle of civilization.
Following are 10 examples of how Chinese people endured the great legacy in the passing year:
1. Beijing-Shanghai in four hours
A train of China Railway High-Speed (CRH) is ready for a test running at a railway station in Xuzhou, east China's Jiangsu Province, Dec. 3, 2010. In September, the China-made CRH380A train hit a speed of 416.6 kilometers per hour on a test run to set a new world train speed record. It is expected to exceed the record at this test running, which will be held at a section of the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed railway. (Xinhua/Chen Shugen)
Track-laying work for the long-anticipated Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway was completed in late November.
"The project has entered its last stage," Lu Chunfang, vice-minister of railways, said at a ceremony to celebrate the latest success in the city of Bengbu, situated in the center of the railway line.
Since the project kicked off on April 18, 2008, some 135,000 workers have toiled to lay 1,318 km of high-quality tracks. The railway costs 220.94 billion yuan ($33.29 billion) in total and will shorten the travel from roughly ten hours to four hours.
2. Expo Park comes to life
Visitors queue to enter China Pavilion at the World Expo Park in Shanghai, east China, Dec. 1, 2010. After a month's closure and rearrangement, the China Pavilion of Shanghai World Expo reopened to public on Wednesday, attracting streams of visitors. (Xinhua)
The Shanghai World Expo formally opened its door to the public in May.
The Expo, carrying a theme of "Better City, Better Life", reflected the crystallization of wisdom about urban construction and vision of a better future life, Jia Qinglin, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, said while addressing the opening ceremony.
The construction of Expo Park started in August 2006. It covered a total area of 5.28 sq km.
3. Disneyland comes to Shanghai
Walt Disney Co on Nov 5 announced it had cleared an important hurdle in its efforts to build a multi-billion-dollar theme park in Shanghai, as it signed a detailed agreement with local authorities spelling out how they would jointly operate Shanghai Disneyland.
4. The new underground city
Beijings Dongcheng district will dig and clear out eight sq km of underground space in the next 20 years for construction including building shopping malls and subterranean roads.
With 625,000 residents and 37 percent of the city's protected historic sites, the 25 sq km district is bursting at the seams with new buildings and expanding streets.
So to allow for greater development, an ambitious plan was released on Jan 13 by the local government which claimed the "new Dongcheng" would have three floors of underground space.
5. 15-story hotel built in six days
A construction company that operates under the Broad Group took less than a week, or 136 hours of work, to erect and complete the outside of a 15-story prefabricated building in June in Changsha, capital of Central China's Hunan province.
The technology of using prefabricated materials to erect buildings has given this type of construction the edge over conventional construction methods in terms of efficiency, the company said.
The project involved only 200 construction workers.
Editors' Note: China has a tradition of building big. Tracing back to the Great Wall and the splendid imperial palaces, the ancient Chinese were addicted to the massive impact created by building gigantic constructions.
China never stopped constructing, especially after the government injected four trillion yuan to the market to stimulate the economy two years ago. The country's people decided to let the tradition continue by building new construction wonders in the cradle of civilization.
Following are 10 examples of how Chinese people endured the great legacy in the passing year:
1. Beijing-Shanghai in four hours

A train of China Railway High-Speed (CRH) is ready for a test running at a railway station in Xuzhou, east China's Jiangsu Province, Dec. 3, 2010. In September, the China-made CRH380A train hit a speed of 416.6 kilometers per hour on a test run to set a new world train speed record. It is expected to exceed the record at this test running, which will be held at a section of the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed railway. (Xinhua/Chen Shugen)
Track-laying work for the long-anticipated Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway was completed in late November.
"The project has entered its last stage," Lu Chunfang, vice-minister of railways, said at a ceremony to celebrate the latest success in the city of Bengbu, situated in the center of the railway line.
Since the project kicked off on April 18, 2008, some 135,000 workers have toiled to lay 1,318 km of high-quality tracks. The railway costs 220.94 billion yuan ($33.29 billion) in total and will shorten the travel from roughly ten hours to four hours.
2. Expo Park comes to life

Visitors queue to enter China Pavilion at the World Expo Park in Shanghai, east China, Dec. 1, 2010. After a month's closure and rearrangement, the China Pavilion of Shanghai World Expo reopened to public on Wednesday, attracting streams of visitors. (Xinhua)
The Shanghai World Expo formally opened its door to the public in May.
The Expo, carrying a theme of "Better City, Better Life", reflected the crystallization of wisdom about urban construction and vision of a better future life, Jia Qinglin, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, said while addressing the opening ceremony.
The construction of Expo Park started in August 2006. It covered a total area of 5.28 sq km.
3. Disneyland comes to Shanghai

Walt Disney Co on Nov 5 announced it had cleared an important hurdle in its efforts to build a multi-billion-dollar theme park in Shanghai, as it signed a detailed agreement with local authorities spelling out how they would jointly operate Shanghai Disneyland.
4. The new underground city

Beijings Dongcheng district will dig and clear out eight sq km of underground space in the next 20 years for construction including building shopping malls and subterranean roads.
With 625,000 residents and 37 percent of the city's protected historic sites, the 25 sq km district is bursting at the seams with new buildings and expanding streets.
So to allow for greater development, an ambitious plan was released on Jan 13 by the local government which claimed the "new Dongcheng" would have three floors of underground space.
5. 15-story hotel built in six days

A construction company that operates under the Broad Group took less than a week, or 136 hours of work, to erect and complete the outside of a 15-story prefabricated building in June in Changsha, capital of Central China's Hunan province.
The technology of using prefabricated materials to erect buildings has given this type of construction the edge over conventional construction methods in terms of efficiency, the company said.
The project involved only 200 construction workers.