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The destruction of Shenzhen’s Baishizhou Urban Village

China Architecture News - Sep 23, 2016 - 13:11   12686 views

The destruction of Shenzhen’s Baishizhou Urban Village

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“Village” may not seem like the right term for a cluster of tenement-style walkups that can house more than 100,000 people. Chengzhongcun hang onto the name partly because of the familiarity evoked by the traditions and small-scale businesses that thrive among their migrant populations, and partly because when modern Shenzhen began growing, these places really were just villages in the middle of the city.

In the late 1970s, when Beijing undertook plans to turn Shenzhen into the country’s first Special Economic Zone — an experimental area with more liberal financial policies — the government first had to purchase land from the local villagers living there, mostly farmers and fishermen, and convert it to municipal property. Officials took the path of least resistance, buying up farmland and leaving the actual villages untouched. This left villagers with lump sums of cash but extinguished the basis for their agricultural lifestyle, and essentially set them adrift in a rising sea of construction projects. Crucially, though, their homes were still designated as rural land. Although they were living at ground zero for Shenzhen’s big bang of urbanization, they still held onto special home ownership rights, giving them a degree of freedom in deciding what to do with their pockets of the city.....Continue Reading

Top image © Theodore Kaye 

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