This was an interesting tidbit on tonight's Newshour. Oh my dear god! A nation on the rise, or what?
(c) PBS
(c) PBS
Not true. We have Trump's ego for a counter balanceand that is why earth's axis is getting wobbly
Not true. We have Trump's ego for a counter balance
Not true. We have Trump's ego for a counter balance
To build empty cities?
But that's all hot air...no mass found.
Yeah to me it's so incredible that it's a bit hard to believe. I don't think it's necessarily false, but I'd like more details too.I saw this statistic before...I have trouble believing it. We built a lot of damned freeways in the 20th century. I know China has done so too, as well as a lot of cities from the ground up. But still, I'd like to see some more details to really believe it.
They're also pretty good at building giant fucking dams made out of cement and stuff
One was just opened, the other was about to close. You want me to go get pictures of malls in the US that are also abandoned?
The media is portraying the exceptions as the norm. Ordos is the most extreme exception and that city still has a lot of people living there.
If you consider St Louis and Detroit to be ghost cities, then by that definition no I can't deny it. But Ordos is almost 2 million people, and its one of the richest cities in China so of course they're going to overbuild. It's in the middle of nowhere and the government is desperate to get people into less populated areas.That's all well and good, but you cannot deny that the Chinese build ghost cities.
I haven't heard that they weren't allowed to but I have heard it was considered the best investment. A few anecdotes I've heard but not sure the validity:I heard that, for a long time, the Chinese people weren't allowed to invest in much except real estate. So they built lots of apartments that are never occupied; just bought as 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. "investment homes".
So is that really how many people live there? Or just how many own living spaces there?
Sounds like my fair city where the politicians and developers think the jobs will magically appear if we build enough housing. In my neighborhood the builders finally sold the back stock from the 2000-2006 housing bubble (some of the houses built in 2003 finally sold this year) and are building the next bubble as fast as they can. Construction methods are even worse this time around so I pity the fools that buy these houses.Where I live, their are lots of buildings under construction or sitting empty. I am not sure how long it will take to fill because they are building houses faster than jobs are being created, I think this is where the impression of the ghost towns comes from. Everyone is in a rush to get the young people to move to their city so they're trying to build as much as they can, but if they don't get the jobs to come here then they're doomed. Chengdu was smart and invested heavily in tech, automobiles, and research. It's one of the few places in China that is still growing economically at a rapid pace. The smaller cities around Sichuan are kind of dead in the water as anyone with a college degree is coming here or Chongqing. Those cities have a lot of buildings half constructed on the edge of town, and when you go there it seems kind of empty. Alot of people live there but its usually old people who don't work or don't have much money.
About the same here...the construction methods seem sound enough (i think the 2008 and 2013 earthquake put a stop to the shoddy methods) but the interior of builds are atrocious. Stuff that is a few years old looks 15-20 years old. Some of the contractors build in places that make no sense, go bankrupt, and the local government takes over the project.Sounds like my fair city where the politicians and developers think the jobs will magically appear if we build enough housing. In my neighborhood the builders finally sold the back stock from the 2000-2006 housing bubble (some of the houses built in 2003 finally sold this year) and are building the next bubble as fast as they can. Construction methods are even worse this time around so I pity the fools that buy these houses.