“Lessons from China” in Amsterdam

In a special edition of WorldTalks, the weekly Urban Mixer for the internationally minded community of Amsterdam, we will present the Dutch edition of our book.
Together with NEXT Architects, an office with extensive experience in China, we will give short, provoking presentations about the lessons that Europe can learn from China’s rise. And we will talk about our plan to turn the Dutch province of Flevoland into a Chinese-style Special Economic Zone…

Friday 13 April | 18:00 | Café Cox | Marnixstraat 429 | Amsterdam | Free entrance | More information

March 23rd, 2012 | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

Amsterdam meets PRD

This is an image of Google Earth of the city of Amsterdam from a height of 7km. It shows the inner city of the Dutch capital, its canal structure and its 19th century expansions surrounding it. Vice-mayor Maarten van Poelgeest is the man who is in charge of spatial planning in this well-structured city. Last week it was our task to introduce mr Van Poelgeest to the dynamic conditions of Chinese cities by making a study trip. We traveled through the Pearl River Delta, from Hong Kong to Wuhan where mr Van Poelgeest attended the ISOCARP Conference, together with the deputy director of the urban planning department, Zef Hemel, who delivered a key note speech. In the conference, Amsterdam won the Award of Excellence for their Structural Vision 2040.

Of course, these trips are about understanding cities, but also about comparing. Let’s make a cross section of the urban areas that we visited, also from a height of 7km.

We started off on Hong Kong island (above), one of the densest built places on earth. The Floor Area Ratio in the city reaches levels of 5 to 7. This is mainly because the city decided to keep 75% of its land green. In 10 minutes from Occupy Central to Occupy Beach!

At Hong Kong University we discussed the extreme condition of the Hong Kong / Shenzhen border (above), where the city of Hong Kong still maintains the buffer zone that after 60 years of being a no-go area turned into a sort of eco-enclave between Hong Kong and Shenzhen. In stark contrast, the city of Shenzhen expanded to the absolute edges, so the two political systems meet each other represented by nature (HK) and high rise (China).

In Shenzhen, the heart of the PRD with 13 million inhabitants, we visited – amongst others – the BYD headquarters. In 16 years this company turned from a start-up to a 170.000 employee mega-company with 9.9% of its shares hold by Warren Buffet. The company has its headquarters in an industrial area in the north east of the city (above) in an urban condition that HKU researcher Joshua Bolchover described to as a ‘scrambled egg’. On the campus, 20,000 BYD employees live and work together.

The high speed train connects Shenzhen and Guangzhou in roughly an hour. In Guangzhou, we took the subway to the Xiaoguwei University Island (above), a recently developed area of 20 square kilometer with 10 universities where 100,000 students and 100,000 university employees live, study and work together in futuristic condition. The island has 3,5 million square meter of indoor space and can finally accomodate 400,000 people. On the island, some urban villages remain, that provide all kind of low profile facilities to the students. On Saturday night the villages form lively neighborhoods with restaurants and night markets being packed.

Finally we ended our trip in the city of Wuhan, the capital of Wuhan that celebrates the 100th birthday of the nationalist revolution that ended the rule of the emperors. The city used the celebrations to spend 3 billion on urban development: a 1911 museum, a monument, infrastructure and other buildings. Two years ago, the city planners were fully focused on the development of the Wangjiadun Central Business District. However, the planners of the Wuhan Planning and Development Institute (WPDI) shifted their focus southwards, to the lake area in the district of Wuchang. ‘The CBD is not developing fast enough.’
In the east part of the city we finally visited a new development area where the urban and the rural clash: this is where Le Corbusier and Mr Sun are confronted with each other…

October 26th, 2011 | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Exploding Stadsschouwburg!

Last Tuesday, after a diverse program of lectures, music and theatre, Amsterdam Deputy Mayor Maarten van Poelgeest, responsible for spatial planning, received the first issue of our book How the City Moved to Mr Sun. In a sold out (!) Stadsschouwburg, our program Exploding China showed the transformation of China’s new megacities.

Jiang Jun

Wang Fei

Jiang Jun had a great key note lecture about the Chongqing model, Wang Fei introduced the concept of Shanzai architecture and Joan Veldkamp interviewed prof Stefan Landsberger and prof Peter Ho about the economy, cultural life and future of Chinese megacities.

Panel with prof Stefan Landsberger, prof Peter Ho, interviewed by journalist Joan Veldkamp

September 16th, 2011 | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

Program Exploding China – China’s New Megacities

Exploding China – China’s New Megacities

13 September 2011, 20.00 – 22.30h

Over the next two decades around 300 million Chinese villagers will move to the city, creating the largest urban society the world has ever seen. Unknown Chinese megacities like Wuhan (10 million inhabitants), Shijiazhuang (9 million) and Chongqing (33 million) are transforming at breakneck pace into the big brothers and sisters of global cities like Rio de Janeiro, London and Moscow.

The transformation follows a ruthless logic: farmers demolish their homes and build their own high-rise apartment blocks, torn down again by city authorities in the name of progress. Everywhere in the country, new business districts, skylines and even complete ghost cities emerge. The effects are felt far outside China. The growing urban middle class has ever more money to spend, driving up demand for luxuries worldwide. Chinese students are conquering the lecture halls of Harvard and Yale.

In a refreshing program with presentations, live interviews, theatre, music and debate, Stadsschouwburg Amsterdam and the Go West Project will offer you a program with Chinese and Dutch experts who shine their light on the breathtaking developments in these new cities, and the implications for the rest of the world.

Idea and realisation:
Stadsschouwburg Amsterdam and Go West Project Melle Daamen, Wiepke Westbroek, Michiel Hulshof, Daan Roggeveen

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September 12th, 2011 | Tags: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Exploding China: Chinese Cities in Amsterdam City Theatre

On September 13, the City Theatre of Amsterdam will host the program Exploding China – China’s New Megacities on unknown Chinese megacities like Wuhan, Shijiazhuang and Chongqing. These cities are transforming at breakneck pace into the big brothers and sisters of global cities like Rio de Janeiro, London and Moscow. Here, China is constructing the biggest urban society the world has ever seen.

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July 18th, 2011 | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »