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China 2.0: MEGA Cities, SMART Cities

For the millions of farmers who live outside the cities, a sense of uncertainty lingers. Farmers have few property rights in China, and the Communist Party has repeatedly made claims to join urban and rural markets to improve conditions. But doubt remains.

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With crane-topped residential buildings as his back drop, a man in Hefei, Anhui province, carries buckets of water through his vegetable field.

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Residential buildings scrape the sky, but many remain unsold. Vacant apartments may usher in the millions of people China hopes to migrate, but developers are wary to start new projects when current ones go nowhere.

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In many parts of the largest cities, migrant workers live in rundown buildings that sit squarely inside a perimeter of giant office buildings — making clear the income discrepancies found all throughout China.
Some of these houses are temporary, like this house built for migrant workers near a construction site in Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

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Despite these hurdles, the plan is making strides. China has managed to build enormous highway systems and erect mammoth buildings that, someday, will challenge industrialized nations in their domestic output.

despite-these-hurdles-the-plan-is-making-strides-china-has-managed-to-build-enormous-highway-systems-and-erect-mammoth-buildings-that-someday-will-challenge-industrialized-nations-in-their-domestic-output.jpg


The China of 1867, with its rolling rocks and hand-made huts, has been transformed. The country's urban regions are humming with growth. Uniform buildings sit shoulder to shoulder.

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But for all its growth, the towers and cranes only show a fraction of what's in store.

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China is just getting started.

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http://www.businessinsider.com/phot...#/#china-is-just-getting-started-222222222227
 
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Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei development to see progress
August 23, 2015
c03fd5566a1d1743d0b721.jpg
[Photo/China Daily]



China has set goals for more coordinated Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei (or Jing-Jin-Ji in their abbreviations) regional development in the next 15 years mainly by transferring non-essential functions of Beijing as the national capital to neighboring areas, an official document said.

By 2017, major breakthroughs in transportation integration, environmental protection and industrial upgrading in the integrated region will be achieved, said the document issued by the office of a leading group for the coordinated development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area on Sunday.

The document revealed key information of an outline of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integrated development program, which was approved by the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee in April.

Beijing will become "the national center of political, cultural, and international exchange activities" as well as a technological innovation center, said the document.

Tianjin municipality will be a national research and development base for advanced manufacturing industry, a shipping hub for north China, a demonstration area for financial innovation, and an experimental area for further reform and opening up.

Hebei province will be an important national base for trade and logistics, an experimental area for industrial transition and upgrading, a demonstration area of modern urbanization and coordinated development of urban and rural areas, and an ecological buffer zone.

The strategy will see the relocation of nonessential functions from Beijing, which will help adjust the regional economic structure, nurture new growth sectors, and address problems of megacities such as overpopulation, pollution, and resources scarcity.

The medium-term target of the strategy is, by 2020, to control the permanent population of Beijing within 23 million, and to relieve Beijing's "urban illnesses" such as air pollution and congestion.

Social development gaps between different areas would be reduced as a result of better delivery of public services in the region.

In the long term, the strategy aims to form an integrated region of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, with better economic structure, cleaner environment and improved public service ability. The integrated region will become an important region with strong competitiveness and influence in the world, said the document.

Priority will be given to traffic management, environmental protection, energy security and industrial upgrades. Public services will be improved and the area will be created into a better place for foreign businesses.

Innovation will be encouraged, and market forces will play a bigger role in utilizing the resources in the region.

As China's economy slows, the program is designed to add momentum to growth.

Some major projects have already been revealed, including a new 80-billion-yuan airport to be built in southern Beijing on the border with Hebei.

@AndrewJin , @cirr , @terranMarine , @Edison Chen
 
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Targets set for new Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei megalopolis
August 24, 2015

Goals have been set for the integrated development of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei in the next 15 years.

Beijing Mayor Wang Anshun vows the capital will work with Tianjin and Hebei province to boost regional development and make the region a leading force for the country's economy. [Photo by Wang Zhuangfei / China Daily]

The aim is to transfer the nonessential functions of Beijing and form an optimized structure for the capital's core functions by 2030, according to an official document.

It is the first time the central authorities have released the three governments' strategic positions in the integrated growth of the trilateral region, giving them clear roles for better coordination.

Beijing will become the national center for politics, culture, international exchanges and scientific and technical innovation.

Tianjin will be a national research and development base for advanced manufacturing, a hub for international shipping in North China, a zone for financial innovation and services, and a pilot zone for economic reform.

Hebei province will be an important national base for trade and logistics, a pilot zone for industrial transformation and upgrading, a demonstration area for modern urbanization and urban-rural integration, and an ecological buffer zone, the document said.

It reveals key information for the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integrated development program, which was approved by the national leadership in April.

The document was issued by the office of the leading group for Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integrated development, Xinhua News Agency reported.

Beijing and its two neighbors have faced severe challenges from social and environmental issues.

For example, Beijing has performed too many functions beyond its role as a capital, bringing it serious urban problems including a high population, traffic congestion, air pollution and soaring property prices.

Within the region, the three areas have faced groundwater depletion, environmental pollution and a sharp contradiction between economic growth and natural resources.

The regional challenges mean that coordinated development is urgent and necessary to solve these problems. The priority for the integration will be the transfer of noncapital functions from Beijing to Tianjin and Hebei.

By 2017, breakthroughs in transportation integration, environmental protection and industrial upgrading in the trilateral region will be achieved, with Beijing seeing "remarkable progress" in easing its noncapital functions, the document states.

The medium-term target for the regional integration strategy is to contain Beijing's population within 23 million and to improve the environment by 2020.

Industrial coordination will achieve regional breakthroughs with an efficient integrated growth system. Social development gaps between different areas will be reduced by a better delivery of public services.

By 2030, the strategy aims to form an integrated Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, with an improved economic structure, cleaner environment and better public services. The integrated region will become an area with strong competitiveness and influence globally, according to the document.

"The targets can be met if the three areas can fully implement the efforts," said Yang Hongshan, a professor of local government development at Renmin University of China.

The document requires the three areas to discuss detailed plans to reach the goals, which may take some time after the outline is released, Yang added.

The leading group also stressed the importance of implementation, saying it will break down barriers in the three administrative areas that block the free flow of capital, technology, property rights and labor.

They will promote a coordination system for policymaking relating to administration, infrastructure construction, environmental protection, industrial development and technological innovation.

Highlights

A look at the guideline for the coordinated development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region:

Reducing Beijing's burdens: The guideline says the primary target is to release Beijing from its noncapital functions, and solve the city's major problems in urban development. It will also increase the coordination between Beijing and Tianjin, enhancing industrial cooperation and urban integration. The main framework of the coordination lies in three city clusters: Beijing and Tianjin; Beijing, Baoding and Shijiazhuang; and Beijing, Tangshan and Qinhuangdao.

Targets

2017: There will be progress in reducing the noncapital functions in Beijing, and breakthroughs in the coordination of transportation, environmental protection and industrial upgrading.

2020: The population of Beijing will be contained within 23 million, and the problems that arose with its urban development could be effectively solved. A coordinated transportation network will take shape, and the regional environment will be improved significantly, with progress being made in the coordinated development of industries. Gaps in public services such as education and medical care will be effectively closed. The investments in science and innovation will be further strengthened.

2030: A coordinated pattern of regional development will take shape.
 
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Time to issue a series of JJJ bonds

Time to create JJJ bank by merging the Bank of Beijing、the Bank of Tianjin、the Bohai Bank and the Bank of Hebei

Time to establish a general coach company for long-distance services within the JJJ area

Time to set-up a general rail company for integrated rapid rail transits within the JJJ area

Time for the PLA headquarters & affiliated departments to vacate prime lands in central Beijing and setup shops elsewhere

Time for the 2 dozens or so of PLA general hospitals in Beijing to relocate to Hebei and Tianjin

Time for the tens of PLA academies、universities、colleges etc in Beijing to relocate to Hebei and Tianjin

Time 。。。。。。
 
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Time to issue a series of JJJ bonds

Time to create JJJ bank by merging the Bank of Beijing、the Bank of Tianjin、the Bohai Bank and the Bank of Hebei

Time to establish a general coach company for long-distance services within the JJJ area

Time to set-up a general rail company for integrated rapid rail transits within the JJJ area

Time for the PLA headquarters & affiliated departments to vacate prime lands in central Beijing and setup shops elsewhere

Time for the 2 dozens or so of PLA general hospitals in Beijing to relocate to Hebei and Tianjin

Time for the tens of PLA academies、universities、colleges etc in Beijing to relocate to Hebei and Tianjin

Time 。。。。。。
Beijing has too many headquarters of SOEs, just move half, northern Hebei will be completely different,
 
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Beijing has too many headquarters of SOEs, just move half, northern Hebei will be completely different,

Take a good look at Beijing's map、pick out the blocks and areas denoted by XX Yuan(X号院)and one comes to realize just how large and rich a landlord the PLA is。:hitwall::D:argh:
 
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Take a good look at Beijing's map、pick out the blocks and areas denoted by XX Yuan(X号院)and one comes to realize just how large and rich a landlord the PLA is。:hitwall::D:argh:
I know that, I have some relatives inside. Quite boring place, no commercial areas in the neighbourhood.
 
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China 2.0: How Upgraded Cities Are Driving The Future Of China
Feb 23, 2016 @ 08:40 AM


“We are now coming to the new city center,” Charles Dou, a local businessman in Taizhou, Jiangsu once said when giving me a tour of his rapidly expanding, tier three city four years ago.

“What do you mean the new city center?” I asked, holding the concept that “city center” is a designation that generally remains fixed and immutable.

“The city center used to be by the Pozijie (an older shopping center in the historic core), but then it was moved here last year when Wanda opened,” he answered matter-of-factly, as though describing an occurrence that happened daily.

In 2011, Wanda Plaza, a chain of shopping mall/ residential living combos, opened up a location in the south of Taizhou, and since then the wheels of development began turning full speed in that sector of the city. Suddenly, an area that up until that point was all meandering alleys of traditional style, dilapidated grey brick and terracotta-roof houses became the place where everyone wanted to be. Dozens of new high rises were erected, radiating out from the new shopping mall like waves, and a modest array of new middle class F&B operations and relatively classy establishments like Starbucks moved in. Within the span of a year or two, a mini-migration began emanating from the ancient, moat-encircled, 2,000 year old city center to the now trendy area by the Wanda Plaza.

This is a pattern has been replicated throughout China.

Over the past 15 years China’s cities have been busily at work doubling down on their urban cores by constructing completely new sub-cities, districts, and towns in what was once their hinterlands. Shanghai has Pudong, Zhengzhou has Zhengdong, Guangzhou has Zhujiang, Tianjin has Binhai, Chengdu has Tianfu, Suzhou has the Suzhou Industrial Park, Kunming has Chenggong, and Lanzhou has Lanzhou New Area. While the historic cores of China’s big cities tend to maintain some degree of central status — especially in the famous tier one metropolises of the east where the core is still prime commercial and residential territory — new “town centers” have been popping up around their peripheries at an incredible rate. Most of these new centers were built from scratch, being nothing but expanses of farmland liberally sprinkled with small villages before the bulldozers arrive to wipe them off the map, literally.

View attachment 295219
An outline of the original area of Zhengdong New District superimposed over San Francisco. Image: Warner Brown/Google/MapFrappe.

Now, every major city in China has at least one “new and improved” version of itself sitting by its side — and some are surrounded by them. These new areas tend to be massive, often being the same size or even larger than the original urban core. Dantu, a new area of Zhenjiang, commands 748 sq km. Chenggong, Kunming’s flagship new district, is 461 sq km. Tianjin’s Binhai is a collassal 2,270 sq km. While Chengdu’s Tianfu and Suzhou’s SIP come in at 1,578 sq km and 288 sq km respectively. Over the past fifteen years the size of Shanghai has increased nearly sevenfold. Even the relatively minor Changzhou in Jiangsu province recently received approval from the central government to absorb another 1,872 sq km of surrounding farm land, which is larger than London, and this is in addition to its Wujin new district, which is nearly the size of Los Angeles.

To be fair, while these incredibly huge new areas are classified as being urban, that doesn’t mean they’re fully city-like — at least not yet anyway. In China, the term “city” is an administrative designation, and basically just means that a certain area is under the jurisdiction of a municipal level government. (To provide an accurate view, the maps in this story that show some of China’s new districts superimposed over Western cities only show only the built-up or actively developing parts of these newly urbanized areas).

View attachment 295221
A render of Xi’an’s Chan-Ba new area. This is all being built from scratch.

These new areas are often provisioned with all the amenities and necessities that a 21st century Chinese city demands, and are in every way a “city 2.0” type of upgrade project. Rather than completely demolishing and reworking the often outdated or under-planned designs of the historic core, the idea is to start over from scratch on a completely blank canvas of land nearby. These new areas tend to have wide roadways that are designed to accommodation masses of personal automobiles, lavish parks and monuments, a premium stock of luxury and middle class housing, high-quality office space, gargantuan new headquarters for the local government, and are well-connected to the new logistical and transportation grid of the country. These new urban expanses are often attempt to engineer-out many of the pitfalls of the cities they are meant to improve upon — they are places for middle and upper class residents who tire of the crowds, pollution, and unsuitable urban designs of the old city to escape to.

Likewise, China’s well-positioned and/or heavily invested-in new areas are often poised to out-compete the historic cores they are built next to. Ideally, once the initial stages of development are completed on a large scale new town a gravitational pull will begin drawing in the trendiest retail outlets, companies looking to upgrade their office space, the best schools and medical facilities, and posh residents looking to live by the newest and best shopping mall. In a very real sense, these place really can become new city centers.

View attachment 295222
The built-up part of Kunming’s Chenggong new district superimposed over London. Image: Warner Brown/Google/MapFrappe.

This model for development has created an old city/ new city dichotomy across China, which is perhaps no better exemplified than in Zhengzhou. With the intention of building a “national central city,” the party leaders of Henan Province and Zhengzhou, its capital, sought to expand and modernize their city. What they did was almost incomprehensible outside of the context of China: they added on a 150 square kilometer new district (larger than San Francisco) which effectively doubled the city’s size. They called it Zhengdong New Area, and developed it in six distinct parts: an extravagant CBD, a logistics zone that includes a high-speed rail station, a giant residential area, a university town, a science park, and two high-tech industrial parks. The new district provided over 3 million sq meters of new office space, 400,000 housing units to live or invest in, dozens of shopping malls, golf courses, European-style neighborhoods, and just about anything else China’s middle and upper classes could desire.

Although many international media sources erroneously claimed it to be a “ghost town” during its initial stages of development, Zhengdong is now vying to become the new heart of the city and is already the financial capital of Henan province. Fifteen major banks, including HSBC, have their regional headquarters there, which process 70 percent of deposits and 60 percent of all loans in the province. Fifteen universities are also in operation, bringing in 240,000 students and staff. According to a May 2014 “On The Ground” report by Standard Chartered Bank, occupancy in the new area more than doubled since 2012, rising to more than 60 percent. Foxconn has a 120,000+ worker factory there. Zhengdong has also since expanded to 260 sq kilometers and there are plans in the works to extend it out to 500 sq kilometers by 2020, as Zhengzhou quickly merges with Kaifeng into one of China’s 10 proposed mega-regions.

View attachment 295223
Zhengdong over New York City. Image: Warner Brown/Google/MapFrappe.

Why this is significant is because these new areas are the places in China where the new business opportunities are arising and where large amounts of money is flowing into. It’s not just about developing a new area full of land and real estate that can be sold but about creating a new gravitational pull to get people, businesses, and public institutions to come in and take advantage of what’s being offered. The municipal, and in some cases central, governments of China are often instrumental in triggering this transition, and will ship in new universities, state owned enterprises, banks, and give incentives (tax breaks, free rent) to private companies to move in.

Chengdu’s Tianfu New Area is now producing one out of every five desktop computers and two out of three iPads in the world, while Tianjin’s Binhai New Area now has 57 Fortune Global 500 companies and Suzhou’s SIP (Suzhou Industrial Park) has 91. Once the ball is rolling on a new district market forces tend to take over, as one time backwaters become new city centers — into the places that will tell the future of China.
 
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I don't know about China, but where I am, I stay away from condos. I'm very happy in my detach house. With new condos popping up each day the majority buyers are speculators and Chinese who buy them to rent out. Living next to renters can be a nightmare, lol
 
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With more Chinese having cars, high rise will slowly be abandoned in China. When you have cars, you will hate high rise and crowded cities. Also companies will move to suburbs due to rising cost of cities, similar to USA. There will also be more shopping malls in suburbs with rising number of cars. This kind of design is clearly out of date.

China should stop the idea of super-cities and focus more improvement of infrastructure on suburbs and small cities. China is not Hong Kong, Singapore or Japan. We have enough lands. Almost all Chinese family will have cars, which is significantly different from those regions.

China should follow Zhejiang model with almost no mega cities and many prosperous county level cities. Even Hanzhou only have 2 million people. All people enjoy cars with few traffic.
 
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With more Chinese having cars, high rise will slowly be abandoned in China. When you have cars, you will hate high rise and crowded cities. Also companies will move to suburbs due to rising cost of cities, similar to USA. There will also be more shopping malls in suburbs with rising number of cars. This kind of design is clearly out of date.

China should stop the idea of super-cities and focus more improvement of infrastructure on suburbs and small cities. China is not Hong Kong, Singapore or Japan. We have enough lands. Almost all Chinese family will have cars, which is significantly different from those regions.
I disagree. What you proposed is LA style urban sprawl. This results in inefficient public transport and everyone will need a car which is wasteful.
Building upward into mega cities is the way to go. This maximize the public transport systems, reduced polution and waste. It will also improve productivity, energy efficiency and maximize the country resources.
 
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With more Chinese having cars, high rise will slowly be abandoned in China. When you have cars, you will hate high rise and crowded cities. Also companies will move to suburbs due to rising cost of cities, similar to USA. There will also be more shopping malls in suburbs with rising number of cars. This kind of design is clearly out of date.

China should stop the idea of super-cities and focus more improvement of infrastructure on suburbs and small cities. China is not Hong Kong, Singapore or Japan. We have enough lands. Almost all Chinese family will have cars, which is significantly different from those regions.

China should follow Zhejiang model with almost no mega cities and many prosperous county level cities. Even Hanzhou only have 2 million people. All people enjoy cars with few traffic.

China does not have enough arable land for that and that also involves moving people. Moving people is infrastructure. People hate crowded cities and high rise, but they also hate boredom, lack of opportunity and low business even more. It is simply mathematically true that as density increases, the cost efficiency of all public infrastructure decreases.
 
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With more Chinese having cars, high rise will slowly be abandoned in China. When you have cars, you will hate high rise and crowded cities. Also companies will move to suburbs due to rising cost of cities, similar to USA. There will also be more shopping malls in suburbs with rising number of cars. This kind of design is clearly out of date..

I tried to say that in this thread:
Mapping China’s middle class

Read down a few

I tried to say that in this thread:
Mapping China’s middle class

Read down a few

@HongWu002 ...you have any comment
 
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