flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Despite China's 'ghost cities,' the country continues construction boom

Mixed-Use

Despite China's 'ghost cities,' the country continues construction boom

Cities continue to spring up in the heart of China. Designed to accommodate millions, many are still nearly empty.


By Adilla Menayang, Assistant Digital Editor | July 22, 2015
China, Development, Master Plan, Urban Planning

Thames Town in Songjiang imitates a typical English town. Wikipedia lists it is as one of China's many ghost towns. Photo: Huai Chun Hsu/Wikimedia Commons

Construction in China continues to boom at a rapid pace, even without 3D printers that can print a skyscraper in just 19 days.

Developers and local governments in China are known for building master planned developments from scratch, but as Forbes contributor Kenneth Rapoza points out, many of them today are still ghost towns.

“From shopping malls to soccer stadiums, hundreds of new cities in China are largely empty. And yet more cities are still being built deep in the heart of the country,” Rapoza writes.

The city of Ordos, in China’s province of Inner Mongolia, is an example of such city. It made headlines in Western media after journalist Wade Shepard featured the city in his book, “Ghost Cities of China.”

Time magazine published a web slideshow of Kangbashi District in Ordos, with photography by Michael Christopher Brown. It shows swaths of subdivisions, mid-rise apartments, and commercial complexes built to entertain and accommodate a population the size of San Diego, but remains nearly empty.

Yet under-occupancy doesn’t seem to deter development. Last week, renderings started to circulate online of a walkable, terrace-shaped exhibition hall that Chinese practice Kuanlu Architects designed for Otog, also in Ordos.

“China’s continued urbanization push can be viewed as a full-on effort to develop an insulated economy that’s based on domestic production delivering goods and services to domestic consumers,” Rapoza writes, adding that it is a result of economic crises in the U.S. and E.U. taking a toll on China’s economy.

Related Stories

High-rise Construction | Mar 3, 2017

Detroit's tallest tower to rise at site of former J.L Hudson's Department Store

SHoP Architects and Hamilton Anderson Associates will design the 52-story building.

Mixed-Use | Mar 1, 2017

New hotel and residential tower coming to San Francisco’s Transbay neighborhood

The ground-up development will feature 255 hotel rooms and 69 residential units.

Mixed-Use | Feb 27, 2017

Tallest tower in Miami to begin construction in January 2019

The tower will reach a height of 1,049 feet, the maximum height permitted by the FAA in Miami.

Mixed-Use | Feb 23, 2017

5-tower scheme revealed for Zhengzhou, China

The towers will vary in height and emerge from a shared retail podium.

Mixed-Use | Feb 22, 2017

Hunt Development Group selected to spearhead Cabrini-Green redevelopment

The Chicago Housing Authority selected the firm to develop mixed-income housing and retail space where the infamous housing project once stood.

Mixed-Use | Feb 21, 2017

Coconut Grove’s newest mixed-use development springs from a converted parking garage

Terra says the development will be the first newly built office building in central Coconut Grove in over 20 years.

High-rise Construction | Feb 17, 2017

Zaha Hadid Architects-designed building to have the world’s tallest atrium

A 190-meter atrium will rise the full height of the building between two twisting sections.

Mixed-Use | Feb 8, 2017

Santiago Calatrava’s first major UK project will be the heart of the Greenwich Peninsula transformation

Peninsula Place will cost £1 billion and act as a gateway to the new, master-planned district.

Mixed-Use | Feb 7, 2017

Traditional Arab architecture and the surrounding mountainous terrain inspire a luxury hotel in Mecca

The Foster + Partners-designed building will address the shortage of accommodation in Mecca.

High-rise Construction | Jan 26, 2017

Paris tower provides office space and three hotel complexes across its three superimposed volumes

Equipped with hanging gardens and a panoramic viewpoint for its top tier, Jardins de l’Arche Tower will rise in Paris’s La défense business district.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021