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Xiongan very likely to follow example of Singapore in land management: advisor

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Xiongan very likely to follow example of Singapore in
land management: advisor

By Global Times – Agencies Source:Global Times Published: 2017/10/23

Population will be curbed to avoid ‘big city diseases’
The 2,000-square-kilometer mini-city of Xiongan will draw thousands of Beijing government workers

The anticipation for the future of Xiongan has already pushed up land and rental prices

A series of reforms will curb speculation and make Xiongan's housing affordable

4ac5444f-d458-4fd6-8e93-92bd7e1b46bd.jpeg

An overview of Xiongxian county, part of the Xiongan New Area, in Hebei Province. Photo: VCG

For years, Aowei Road, a major thoroughfare running through Rongcheng county, North China's Hebei Province, was where the local government and some clothing shops were located.

Today, it has been dubbed by residents as the "road of central government-owned enterprises" after a slew of big corporations, such as the State Power Investment Corporation, China Communications Construction and the State Development & Investment Corporation, opened their offices there.

This all happened in under six months earlier this year, after China announced in April a massive plan to develop "Xiongan New Area."

Spanning the counties of Xiongxian, Rongcheng and Anxin, the 2,000-square-kilometer "mini-city" of Xiongan will take over Beijing's so-called non-capital functions, such as large enterprises, financial institutions, colleges and research institutions, helping to relieve pressure in the congested capital.

According to estimates made by the management committee of Xiongan New Area, in the six months following its establishment, 65 companies have already moved there from Beijing. At night, yellow lights from all the new office buildings illuminate the once-dark, quiet little town.

But the surge in population will also bring new challenges, including difficulties finding housing, setting up a transportation infrastructure and establishing social welfare. How to build a livable green city that meets the needs of these new transplants will be the top priority for the city's planners and administrators.

Population limit

A study by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) this April said that Xiongan should try to avoid overpopulation, a common phenomenon in many big Chinese cities that has lead to housing, transportation and environmental problems.

With its current population of 1.13 million, the study said that Xiongan's future population should be maintained within 5 million. Reports by the Xinhua News Agency, however, put the future population of Xiongan at around 2.5 million.

Huang Qunhui, director of the Institute of Industrial Economics at CASS, said the relocation of one million people to Xiongan is realizable with the transfer of Beijing's non-capital functions.

But whether the city is able to draw a population in the long term will depend on the vitality of its industries and local economy; it is still too early to predict a future population scale.

According to statistics from 2015, the population density of Shenzhen was 5,713 people per square kilometer, Shanghai at 3,809 and Beijing 1,323. If Xiongan's population is below 2.5 million, its population density will be 1,250 people per square kilometer, slightly lower than that of Beijing.

But if Xiongan's population soars to 5 million, its population density will almost double that of China's capital. Relieving Beijing's population burden by creating somewhere even more crowded than Beijing itself would be contrary to Xiongan's good intentions. The local government should therefore set strict limits on its own population, researchers say.


ff67ffae-bdd5-499d-9875-c22078ef67db.jpeg



Unemployment rate

As Xiongan has positioned itself as a green, smart city of innovation, the CASS report projects that a large number of its future population will be high-end talents who moved there with their companies. Locals, including urban citizens and peasants, will mainly work in the service sector or in jobs which have relatively lower technical requirements.

Another challenge lies in how to deal with the local population working in Xiongan's older industries, which are now undergoing a transformation. In the half-year since it was established, 9,000 small manufacturing businesses in Xiongan that failed to meet environmental requirements have been asked to fold, thereby increasing the local unemployment rate.

Many local construction companies have also halted their projects due to tight controls on China's real estate market. The sudden jobless population of construction workers will be another big challenge for the New Area's management committee and the local government.

The management committee said that it has already rolled out a series of measures to ensure their employment. Over 80 central-government-owned enterprises and local enterprises have provided 100,000 jobs in the counties, and Hebei authorities launched campaigns to provide new training for locals in accounting, housekeeping, afforestation, gardening and even tea ceremony.

Big city diseases

One of the symptoms of "big city diseases" is the separation of residential and work districts, resulting in extremely long commutes. In Beijing, for example, it is not uncommon for people to spend two to three hours on their daily commute.

"One of the biggest problems with Chinese cities is their unbalanced functions. When we talk about development zones, we think of a large zone of factories with no place for night snacks. On the other hand, districts like Huilongguan and Tiantongyuan in Beijing are colossal residential areas with no industries around," Li Xiaojiang, dean of the China Academy of Urban Planning And Design, told China Newsweek.

The result, he concluded, is that people must travel many hours to commute between such areas, which is "really inhuman." Li added that Xiongan will try to alter that problem to become a city where multiple functions develop in balance, thus becoming a model for future cities.

An unnamed official at Xiongan's management committee told China Newsweek that the New Area will be divided into several districts, each several dozen square kilometers. At each of these districts, the people's needs for work, life and public services will all be met.

A study by Xu Zhenqiang, Deputy Director in Chief of Digital City Engineering Research Center, Chinese Society for Urban Studies, showed that as a metro train can travel seven stops, or seven kilometers, in 15 minutes, a 7x7 kilometer grid (about 49 square-kilometer in area), is probably the best size for each Xiongan district.

Public transportation will be the primary means of transport in Xiongan. Most of it will be underground, as well as the city's water, electricity and gas supply and disaster relief systems, according to plans revealed earlier.

Sinopec Green Energy Geothermal Development has been developing geothermal resources in Xiongxian and Rongcheng counties since 2009. Sun Caixia, the company's technology director, said the geological conditions beneath the surface of Xiongan is very good for underground development. "The spacious subterranean area will make underground tunnels and three-dimensional traffic possible," she told China Newsweek.

In August, China's geological authorities announced that after two months of surveying, they concluded that Xiongan is "very suitable for underground development."

Geological departments are also currently building a digital platform, which will provide statistics for future city planning and risk management.

Affordable housing

Quite often when future plans are announced for a Chinese city, a construction spree follows, along with speculators who drive up property prices. Such "land finance" has been part of the engine behind the booming Chinese economy for the past 20 years.

Xiongan hopes to avoid that. In April, after the blueprint for the New Area was first announced, it rolled out a series of measures to stabilize property prices and curb speculation. "The New Area will not rely on land finance (as its development model)," Chen Gang, head of the management committee, told China Newsweek.

In the half year since its announcement, no residential housing was built. Over 1,000 homes, both for commercial and residential use, have been rented to non-local enterprises and individuals who have swarmed into Xiongan over the past six months. Officials say rentals in Xiongxian and Anxin counties rose by 10 to 30 percent, while in Rongcheng, where the New Area's management committee is located, rentals rose by 100 to 300 percent.

To cope with this situation, the local governments of the three counties under the administration of Xiongan put forward a series of measures, including shutting down illegal real estate agencies and establishing a government-led house-renting platform to provide free information to lessors and tenants.

In the future, Xiongan's housing market will very likely follow the model of Singapore, whose government directly manages many lands and constructs public or low-rent housing for those in need, according to Wu Hequan, deputy head of the expert advisory committee on the collaborative development of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei under the State Council.

Xiongan's local authorities are already planning to boost the construction of affordable rental properties for newcomers. The authorities will also establish a point-based system to determine which migrants will be qualified to purchase these homes. Only those who have lived and worked in Xiongan for a certain number of years will be eligible to purchase homes.

Global Times - Agencies

***

Learn from the best, this is China's development mantra. Hence, on public governance/administration, China is neighbor to world's best (as well as worst) nations, Singapore being one of the best, if not the best.

This is China's eclectic governance, which stands in opposition to Indian or Western neo-liberal rigidity for reform and change.
 
. .
It's all about long term planning and seeing through the implementation of details of the plan, especially for urban planning because infrastructures are meant to last for the long term. The devil is in the detail.

Back then Singapore implemented an unpopular policy to limit car population growth, known as the Certificate of Entitlement. It was unpopular, but it's the major reason why the city is clean, green, and traffic is smooth compared to other global cities. Otherwise we had to clear the trees and widen the roads. It was just announced yesterday that they will stop vehicle population growth for the next few years, from 0.25% growth to 0%.

Fortunately the COE was implemented in the early stage so the policy of restricting vehicle growth was cushioned and gradually brought down over 20 years. In other big cities if you restrict the vehicle growth immediately to 0%, there will be huge unhappiness and businesses will not cope too.

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-41730778
 
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All prefab buildings to ship for Xiongan's 1st construction project

Updated 2018-02-02 17:12:01

Video:http://www.chinanews.com/shipin/2018/02-03/news754727.shtml

All modular buildings used for the construction of civic service center in Xiongan New Area will be shipped to the site by mid-February, manufacturers said Thursday, marking a milestone in the construction of the national-level new area.

The civic service center is the first construction project since the establishment of the new area, which was announced by the central government in April.

The project includes 89 serviced apartments covering 4,475 square meters and six office buildings. Nearly 600 modular buildings are needed.

The modular buildings will be shipped from Jiangmen, southern Guangdong province, to ports in Tianjin via Guangzhou or Dongguan. After arriving in Tianjin, they will be transported to the site by road.

CIMC Modular Building Systems Holding, which produces the modular buildings, said 80 percent of the modular buildings required by the project have already been shipped. The rest will be finished and shipped by the middle of this month, the company said.

Modular buildings are a type of prefabricated building model. Instead of doing all the construction work on-site, it allows up to 90 percent of a building project to be finished in the factory, thereby saving time and reducing construction waste.

http://english.china.com/news/china/54/20180202/1197050.html
 
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Xiongan very likely to follow example of Singapore in
land management: advisor

By Global Times – Agencies Source:Global Times Published: 2017/10/23

Population will be curbed to avoid ‘big city diseases’
The 2,000-square-kilometer mini-city of Xiongan will draw thousands of Beijing government workers

The anticipation for the future of Xiongan has already pushed up land and rental prices

A series of reforms will curb speculation and make Xiongan's housing affordable

4ac5444f-d458-4fd6-8e93-92bd7e1b46bd.jpeg

An overview of Xiongxian county, part of the Xiongan New Area, in Hebei Province. Photo: VCG

For years, Aowei Road, a major thoroughfare running through Rongcheng county, North China's Hebei Province, was where the local government and some clothing shops were located.

Today, it has been dubbed by residents as the "road of central government-owned enterprises" after a slew of big corporations, such as the State Power Investment Corporation, China Communications Construction and the State Development & Investment Corporation, opened their offices there.

This all happened in under six months earlier this year, after China announced in April a massive plan to develop "Xiongan New Area."

Spanning the counties of Xiongxian, Rongcheng and Anxin, the 2,000-square-kilometer "mini-city" of Xiongan will take over Beijing's so-called non-capital functions, such as large enterprises, financial institutions, colleges and research institutions, helping to relieve pressure in the congested capital.

According to estimates made by the management committee of Xiongan New Area, in the six months following its establishment, 65 companies have already moved there from Beijing. At night, yellow lights from all the new office buildings illuminate the once-dark, quiet little town.

But the surge in population will also bring new challenges, including difficulties finding housing, setting up a transportation infrastructure and establishing social welfare. How to build a livable green city that meets the needs of these new transplants will be the top priority for the city's planners and administrators.

Population limit

A study by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) this April said that Xiongan should try to avoid overpopulation, a common phenomenon in many big Chinese cities that has lead to housing, transportation and environmental problems.

With its current population of 1.13 million, the study said that Xiongan's future population should be maintained within 5 million. Reports by the Xinhua News Agency, however, put the future population of Xiongan at around 2.5 million.

Huang Qunhui, director of the Institute of Industrial Economics at CASS, said the relocation of one million people to Xiongan is realizable with the transfer of Beijing's non-capital functions.

But whether the city is able to draw a population in the long term will depend on the vitality of its industries and local economy; it is still too early to predict a future population scale.

According to statistics from 2015, the population density of Shenzhen was 5,713 people per square kilometer, Shanghai at 3,809 and Beijing 1,323. If Xiongan's population is below 2.5 million, its population density will be 1,250 people per square kilometer, slightly lower than that of Beijing.

But if Xiongan's population soars to 5 million, its population density will almost double that of China's capital. Relieving Beijing's population burden by creating somewhere even more crowded than Beijing itself would be contrary to Xiongan's good intentions. The local government should therefore set strict limits on its own population, researchers say.


ff67ffae-bdd5-499d-9875-c22078ef67db.jpeg



Unemployment rate

As Xiongan has positioned itself as a green, smart city of innovation, the CASS report projects that a large number of its future population will be high-end talents who moved there with their companies. Locals, including urban citizens and peasants, will mainly work in the service sector or in jobs which have relatively lower technical requirements.

Another challenge lies in how to deal with the local population working in Xiongan's older industries, which are now undergoing a transformation. In the half-year since it was established, 9,000 small manufacturing businesses in Xiongan that failed to meet environmental requirements have been asked to fold, thereby increasing the local unemployment rate.

Many local construction companies have also halted their projects due to tight controls on China's real estate market. The sudden jobless population of construction workers will be another big challenge for the New Area's management committee and the local government.

The management committee said that it has already rolled out a series of measures to ensure their employment. Over 80 central-government-owned enterprises and local enterprises have provided 100,000 jobs in the counties, and Hebei authorities launched campaigns to provide new training for locals in accounting, housekeeping, afforestation, gardening and even tea ceremony.

Big city diseases

One of the symptoms of "big city diseases" is the separation of residential and work districts, resulting in extremely long commutes. In Beijing, for example, it is not uncommon for people to spend two to three hours on their daily commute.

"One of the biggest problems with Chinese cities is their unbalanced functions. When we talk about development zones, we think of a large zone of factories with no place for night snacks. On the other hand, districts like Huilongguan and Tiantongyuan in Beijing are colossal residential areas with no industries around," Li Xiaojiang, dean of the China Academy of Urban Planning And Design, told China Newsweek.

The result, he concluded, is that people must travel many hours to commute between such areas, which is "really inhuman." Li added that Xiongan will try to alter that problem to become a city where multiple functions develop in balance, thus becoming a model for future cities.

An unnamed official at Xiongan's management committee told China Newsweek that the New Area will be divided into several districts, each several dozen square kilometers. At each of these districts, the people's needs for work, life and public services will all be met.

A study by Xu Zhenqiang, Deputy Director in Chief of Digital City Engineering Research Center, Chinese Society for Urban Studies, showed that as a metro train can travel seven stops, or seven kilometers, in 15 minutes, a 7x7 kilometer grid (about 49 square-kilometer in area), is probably the best size for each Xiongan district.

Public transportation will be the primary means of transport in Xiongan. Most of it will be underground, as well as the city's water, electricity and gas supply and disaster relief systems, according to plans revealed earlier.

Sinopec Green Energy Geothermal Development has been developing geothermal resources in Xiongxian and Rongcheng counties since 2009. Sun Caixia, the company's technology director, said the geological conditions beneath the surface of Xiongan is very good for underground development. "The spacious subterranean area will make underground tunnels and three-dimensional traffic possible," she told China Newsweek.

In August, China's geological authorities announced that after two months of surveying, they concluded that Xiongan is "very suitable for underground development."

Geological departments are also currently building a digital platform, which will provide statistics for future city planning and risk management.

Affordable housing

Quite often when future plans are announced for a Chinese city, a construction spree follows, along with speculators who drive up property prices. Such "land finance" has been part of the engine behind the booming Chinese economy for the past 20 years.

Xiongan hopes to avoid that. In April, after the blueprint for the New Area was first announced, it rolled out a series of measures to stabilize property prices and curb speculation. "The New Area will not rely on land finance (as its development model)," Chen Gang, head of the management committee, told China Newsweek.

In the half year since its announcement, no residential housing was built. Over 1,000 homes, both for commercial and residential use, have been rented to non-local enterprises and individuals who have swarmed into Xiongan over the past six months. Officials say rentals in Xiongxian and Anxin counties rose by 10 to 30 percent, while in Rongcheng, where the New Area's management committee is located, rentals rose by 100 to 300 percent.

To cope with this situation, the local governments of the three counties under the administration of Xiongan put forward a series of measures, including shutting down illegal real estate agencies and establishing a government-led house-renting platform to provide free information to lessors and tenants.

In the future, Xiongan's housing market will very likely follow the model of Singapore, whose government directly manages many lands and constructs public or low-rent housing for those in need, according to Wu Hequan, deputy head of the expert advisory committee on the collaborative development of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei under the State Council.

Xiongan's local authorities are already planning to boost the construction of affordable rental properties for newcomers. The authorities will also establish a point-based system to determine which migrants will be qualified to purchase these homes. Only those who have lived and worked in Xiongan for a certain number of years will be eligible to purchase homes.

Global Times - Agencies

***

Learn from the best, this is China's development mantra. Hence, on public governance/administration, China is neighbor to world's best (as well as worst) nations, Singapore being one of the best, if not the best.

This is China's eclectic governance, which stands in opposition to Indian or Western neo-liberal rigidity for reform and change.
Exciting times to be a developer in China with vast areas still to be developed.
Singapore is running out of spaces to develop.
Yes, China should by all means learn from the mistakes and pitfalls from our development and build a better city.
Singapore and China build complete new cities for optimal planning and development which some losers call ghost city.
Fortunately for us, only China got criticized for these endeavours.
.
 
.
I am not sure who in Beijing will want to move into Xiongan. Probably not even native of Shijiazhuang. It is like another Mao's 上山下乡 (go to mountains), and only Mao has the charisma to pull it off.

Today every single Beijinger will want to hold on to good schools, good hospital, shopping mall, good transport system, and even preferential admission to university.

Especially not the princelings 红二代.

Xiongan will rely on village yeoman relocation -- again.
 
.
Exciting times to be a developer in China with vast areas still to be developed.
Singapore is running out of spaces to develop.
Yes, China should by all means learn from the mistakes and pitfalls from our development and build a better city.
Singapore and China build complete new cities for optimal planning and development which some losers call ghost city.
Fortunately for us, only China got criticized for these endeavours.
.

Singapore as a city actually still has space to develop. We aren't saturated yet.

The huge reclamation in Tekong gives us opportunities to move some of our military facilities over, freeing up land in the mainland. I suspect the government may even have plans to develop an aerospace industry in there.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...ilities-in-small-satellites-s-iswaran-9916524
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/commentary-singapore-s-case-for-space-9226728

Once the ports consolidates in Tuas, it will free up alot prime land and we will be building a Greater Southern Waterfront City there.

The shifting of Paya Lebar airbase will not only free up a huge area of land but also remove height restrictions. Currently our tallest skyscraper is only 290m, while KL is already building 600m+ skyscrapers. Our skyline will be transformed once the height restriction is lifted.
 
.
It's all about long term planning and seeing through the implementation of details of the plan, especially for urban planning because infrastructures are meant to last for the long term. The devil is in the detail.

Back then Singapore implemented an unpopular policy to limit car population growth, known as the Certificate of Entitlement. It was unpopular, but it's the major reason why the city is clean, green, and traffic is smooth compared to other global cities. Otherwise we had to clear the trees and widen the roads. It was just announced yesterday that they will stop vehicle population growth for the next few years, from 0.25% growth to 0%.

Fortunately the COE was implemented in the early stage so the policy of restricting vehicle growth was cushioned and gradually brought down over 20 years. In other big cities if you restrict the vehicle growth immediately to 0%, there will be huge unhappiness and businesses will not cope too.

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-41730778

Curbing vehicle growth only works if you increase corresponding public transportation services. this will break american cities if they tried this but perfect for places where public transportation are adequately developed.
 
.
Singapore as a city actually still has space to develop. We aren't saturated yet.

The huge reclamation in Tekong gives us opportunities to move some of our military facilities over, freeing up land in the mainland. I suspect the government may even have plans to develop an aerospace industry in there.

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...ilities-in-small-satellites-s-iswaran-9916524
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/commentary-singapore-s-case-for-space-9226728

Once the ports consolidates in Tuas, it will free up alot prime land and we will be building a Greater Southern Waterfront City there.

The shifting of Paya Lebar airbase will not only free up a huge area of land but also remove height restrictions. Currently our tallest skyscraper is only 290m, while KL is already building 600m+ skyscrapers. Our skyline will be transformed once the height restriction is lifted.
" The 2,000-square-kilometer mini-city of Xiongan will draw thousands of Beijing government workers "

We are talking about different scale here.
Their mini-city development is 2,000 km2, nearly 3x the size of all of Singapore.
We are of course running out of development space, or else why the constant need to keep scavenging places to redevelop. Wide development space like Woodlands, Yishun, Punggol will be difficult to come by.
How wonderful if we had Johore with us.
.
 
.
I am not sure who in Beijing will want to move into Xiongan. Probably not even native of Shijiazhuang. It is like another Mao's 上山下乡 (go to mountains), and only Mao has the charisma to pull it off.

Today every single Beijinger will want to hold on to good schools, good hospital, shopping mall, good transport system, and even preferential admission to university.

Especially not the princelings 红二代.

Xiongan will rely on village yeoman relocation -- again.

Are you serious? Beijing is so grid locked, people are begging to have more breathing room. hence xiongan.
 
.
I am not sure who in Beijing will want to move into Xiongan. Probably not even native of Shijiazhuang. It is like another Mao's 上山下乡 (go to mountains), and only Mao has the charisma to pull it off.

Today every single Beijinger will want to hold on to good schools, good hospital, shopping mall, good transport system, and even preferential admission to university.

Especially not the princelings 红二代.

Xiongan will rely on village yeoman relocation -- again.
quite the opposite
 
.
" The 2,000-square-kilometer mini-city of Xiongan will draw thousands of Beijing government workers "

We are talking about different scale here.
Their mini-city development is 2,000 km2, nearly 3x the size of all of Singapore.
We are of course running out of development space, or else why the constant need to keep scavenging places to redevelop. Wide development space like Woodlands, Yishun, Punggol will be difficult to come by.

One is a completely new city in a rapidly urbanizing country while we are already a mature city-state.

But just using land area to measure a city's scale or development is a false premise. There are countless cities around the world with land areas larger than Singapore, but how many of them are actually comparable? On the other hand there are many first-rate cities with small land area.

Singapore, 719.9 km2, 5.6m people

New York City, 783.84 km2, 8.5m people
Tokyo 23 wards, 619 km2, 9.4m people
Seoul, 605.21 km2, 10.2m people

Would you say these other cities are out of space to develop? A city's development/influence depends heavily on its industry and ability to attract talent, not land area. Even in Singapore, the bulk of our high value-added economic activities are concentrated in little Marina Bay, where a single skyscraper is worth billions.

And there's a relatively huge chunk of land in Marina Bay reserved for future luxury skyscrapers for the next few decades lol. I saw the land use plan and the government has reserved some specific plots of land for supertalls (skyscrapers above 300m) to enhance the aesthetics of our skyline. You see the gap between The Sail and MBFC right in the middle of our skyline? They are probably going to construct supertalls in the middle once the height restriction is lifted when the airbase is relocated.

When building a supertall/megatall, it's crucial to harmonize with other lower skyscrapers within its surroundings. Otherwise it may stick out like a sore thumb like Taipei 101.

RCSINGA_00190.png

But of course, these other cities are part of a larger country. Those cities are the concentration of their country's talent and high value-added economic activities. They can attract talent from all over the country but we don't have that luxury. Every talent we attract from outside the city is a default foreigner since we are a city-state. We have to balance between a city's dynamism and a country's cohesiveness.

How wonderful if we had Johore with us.

Definitely.

But we aren't exactly an isolated island like Maldives or Mauritius in the middle of nowhere of an ocean. The boundaries are artificial; a political one. We are naturally connected to Malaysia, and Malaysia is our natural hinterland. It already acts as one. We import agricultures and shifted our low-end manufacturing to there. There are many Johoreans working in Singapore and Singaporeans living in Johor, just like the metropolitan areas in other countries. Our economies and people will integrate further in the future with the development of Iskandar and SG-JB MRT/HSR.
 
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Are you serious? Beijing is so grid locked, people are begging to have more breathing room. hence xiongan.

I am not sure if any princeling whose son is studying in 4th High School and father lying in 301, want to move entire family to Xiongan -- just for breathing.
 
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I am not sure if any princeling whose son is studying in 4th High School and father lying in 301, want to move entire family to Xiongan -- just for breathing.

now your just trolling lmao.
 
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now your just trolling lmao.
What I said is true.

Say I am am 40 years old and have a medical condition, definitely I need to stay as close to 301 as possible for regular visit.

How about my son in 4th high school? Want him to get transferred to crooked schools in Xiongan where everyone of classmates are dumb, and whereby not a single princeling to network.

Get real.
 
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