Kangbashi New Area
Kangbashi 康巴什 ᠬᠢᠶᠠ ᠪᠠᠭᠰᠢ Kangbashi, Habagexi 哈巴格希 |
|
---|---|
District | |
Hia Bagx New Area | |
Country | China |
Municipality | Ordos |
Time zone | China Standard (UTC+8) |
Kangbashi New Area, or Hia Bagx New Area (Mongolian: ᠬᠢᠶᠠ ᠪᠠᠭᠰᠢ, in Mongolian Cyrillic: Хиа багш, kiy-a baγsi; Chinese: 康巴什新区; pinyin: Kāngbāshí Xīnqū), or Habagexi Subdistrict, is a subdivision of the Chinese city of Ordos, Inner Mongolia, situated in Northern China. It is located southwest of downtown Dongsheng, the old center of the Ordos City, in the border region of Dongsheng District and Ejin Horo Banner.
Built with the ample profits from coal leasing which made Ordos the 2nd highest income-per-capita city in China, the new city is in a location that has better water resources than Ordos City itself.[1]
Contents
History and construction
With an expanding district due to economic exploitation of the local natural resources, but dwindling water supplies due to the continual expansion of the Ordos Desert, Ordos officials were faced with a local infrastructure planning problem. Hence in 2003, Ordos city officials launched the creation of a new 1 million person city district. Located on a 355-square-kilometre (137 sq mi) site 25 kilometres (16 mi) from the existing city of Dongsheng, the new city is located next to three existing reservoirs on the site of two former villages.[2]
As of 2010, the current city on a site of 35 square kilometres (14 sq mi) has capacity for at least 300,000 people, created with an estimated investment of around 1.1 trillion yuan ($161 billion).[3]
Economy
There is a campus of Beijing Normal University and a municipal library. A five-story shopping mall offers a food court and other shopping. A large "fountain show" provides evening entertainment.[4] Economic activity is gradually picking up with the help of the local government which has relocated its administrative center and high quality high schools here. A documentary has been produced, by outside filmmakers which documents the facilities of the city and its gradual growth.[1]
Apartment and office capacity
Characterized as a "ghost town," Kangbashi was made world famous by a news report in November 2009 from Al Jazeera,[5] later picked up and expanded through an April 2010 article in Time magazine,[6] for having few residents but massive amounts of empty residential housing and high-tech public works projects. Subsequent reports have supported the claims that Kangbashi housed around 20,000 to 30,000 people as of 2010.[7] A joint Peking University and Baidu study in 2015 found high vacancy rates in parts of Kangbashi.[8]
Documentary film
Between 2012 and 2014, filmmakers Adam James Smith and Song Ting shot a feature documentary film, The Land of Many Palaces, about the city and its citizens. The directors believe that the population increased markedly during the years that they made the movie and estimated in early 2015 that about 100,000 people then lived in the city.[9]
Transportation
See also
- Yujiapu Financial District, another Chinese ghost city
- Kilamba, empty Chinese-built city in Angola
- Spatial mismatch
References
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External links
- Beinformed article on Kangbashi
- (Chinese) 康巴什新区 baike.baidu.com
- (Chinese) 康巴什新区 hudong.com
- Trailer for the documentary The Land of Many Palaces by Adam James Smith and Song Ting
- The Land of Many Palaces at IMDB
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- ↑ Baidu found China’s “ghost cities,” but it is keeping their locations mostly a secret
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