Kangbashi District Explained

Kangbashi District
Settlement Type:District
Pushpin Map:China Inner Mongolia#China
Pushpin Label:Kangbashi
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Inner Mongolia
Coordinates:39.597°N 109.791°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:China
Subdivision Type1:Autonomous region
Subdivision Name1:Inner Mongolia
Subdivision Type2:Prefecture-level city
Subdivision Name2:Ordos
Seat Type:District seat
Seat:Binhe Subdistrict
Area Total Km2:352
Area Urban Km2:233
Area Urban Footnotes: (2018)[1]
Population Total:118,796
Population As Of:2020
Population Urban:200000
Population Urban Footnotes: (2018; including Ejin Horo)[2]
Population Footnotes:[3]
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Urban Km2:auto
Timezone:China Standard
Utc Offset:+8
Postal Code Type:Postal code
P:Kāngbāshí Qū
W:K‘ang1-pa1-shih2 Ch‘ü1
Gr:Kangbashyr Chiu
Myr:Kāngbāshŕ Chyū
Bpmf:ㄎㄤ   ㄅㄚ   ㄕˊ   ㄑㄩ
Order:st
Showflag:p
Mon:Хиа багш дугариг
Monr:Kiy-a Baγsi Dugarag, Hiya Bagsi dûgûrig

Kangbashi District (; Mongolian:, Hiya Bagsi dûgûrig) is an urban district of the prefecture-level city of Ordos in Inner Mongolia, China.

The district is internationally known for its opulent civic square and monuments and in 2009, made global headlines for having few residents of around 30,000 people, that was considered small relative to the grandeur of the built-up space, and was deemed as a "ghost city".[4] However the district's population has grown since in the years afterwards, and had reportedly reached a size of almost 120,000 people in 2021.[5]

Geography

Within the Ordos prefecture, the district is located southwest of Dongsheng, the prior urban center of Ordos, and north of Ejin Horo Banner. Together with Dongsheng District and Ejin Horo Banner, it forms the city's urban core and is also the political and cultural center of Ordos City. Adjacent to the south is Altan Xire, the highly urbanized county seat of Ejin Horo Banner, separated from the district by the Wulan Mulun River.

History

Kangbashi District's predecessor was Qingchunshan Development Zone, an autonomous region level development zone, approved to be established in December 2000. In 2003, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region agreed to transfer the administrative area of Qingchunshan Development Zone from Yiqi to Dongsheng District; in June of the same year, the fourth session of the People's Congress of Ordos City considered and passed the resolution of relocating the municipal government to Qingchunshan Development Zone; in May 2004, the municipal people's government approved the detailed control plan and renamed it as Kangbashi New District. In 2006, the urban planning of the new area was approved by the regional government as an important part of the overall urban planning of Ordos, and in July of the same year, the city government moved to the new area as a whole. After the preliminary work of planning, demonstration and approval, the construction of the new district officially started and was mainly carried out in three stages: from 2004 to 2007, the infrastructure construction stage; from 2007 to 2011, the above-ground project construction stage; from 2011 to 2015, the project construction perfection stage. In 2016, the State Council agreed to approve the establishment of county-level Kangbashi District, which is the same administrative division as the original Kangbashi New District.

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 355km2 site 25km (16miles) from the existing city of Dongsheng, the new city is located next to three existing reservoirs on the site of two former villages.[6]

By 2010, the current city on a site of 35km2 had capacity for at least 300,000 people, created with an estimated investment of around 1.1 trillion yuan ($161 billion).[7]

In 2021, Nikkei Asia reported that after Ordos No. 1 High School and other locally prestigious schools had relocated to the district, property prices in the area increased significantly.[8]

Administrative divisions

Kangbashi District is made up of 4 subdistricts.

NameSimplified ChineseHanyu PinyinMongolian (Hudum Script)Mongolian (Cyrillic)Administrative division code
Subdistricts
Hia Bagx SubdistrictChinese: 哈巴格希街道Mongolian: Хиа багш зээл гудамж150603001
Qingchunshan SubdistrictChinese: 青春山街道Mongolian: Чин цүн шин зээл гудамж150603002
Binhe SubdistrictChinese: 滨河街道Mongolian: Бин ге зээл гудамж150603003
Kangxin SubdistrictChinese: 康新街道Mongolian: Кан шин зээл гудамж150603008

Other: Ordos City High tech Industrial Park (鄂尔多斯市高新技术产业园区)

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.[9] 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.[10]

Apartment and office capacity

Characterized as a ghost town, Kangbashi was made world-famous by a news report in November 2009 from Al Jazeera,[11] later picked up and expanded through an April 2010 article in Time magazine,[12] 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 .[13] In 2014, the vacancy rate of new homes was 70%.[14] [15]

Writing in Forbes in 2017, Wade Shepard had questioned the justification for the label of "ghost city" and argued that it was being judged too quickly, as it was too soon to be speculating whether a new city will end up being largely uninhabited in the long run. Shepard noted that when Al Jazeera had visited Kangbashi, the city back then was only five years old, and had around 30,000 people, and that it really should have "impressed the world" for having an entirely new city and partially populating it in just five years' time. Shepard also pointed out that by the end of 2015, housing prices have risen by approximately 50% on average and that in 2017, the population has grown to 153,000 people, and there were around 4,750 businesses in operation in the city, as well as having just 500 apartments still left on the market, out of the 40,000 apartments that had been built since 2004.[16]

Transportation

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cox, W. Demographia World Urban Areas. 14th Annual Edition. Demographia. 2018. St. Louis. 82.
  2. Book: Cox, W. Demographia World Urban Areas. 14th Annual Edition. Demographia. 2018. St. Louis. 82.
  3. http://www.citypopulation.de/en/china/neimenggu/admin/ Inner Mongolia: Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties
  4. Web site: The Colossal Strangeness of China's Most Excellent Tourist City . Jody Rosen . The New York Times Style Magazine . March 6, 2015 . March 9, 2015.
  5. Web site: 2021-09-08 . China’s infamous ghost cities are finally stirring to life . 2023-09-26 . Australian Financial Review . en.
  6. Web site: Ghost town. Hu Yinan. China Daily. 10 June 2010. 2010-11-13.
  7. Web site: China's Desert Ghost City Shows Property 'Madness' Persists. Bloomberg News. Jun 23, 2010. 2010-11-13.
  8. Web site: China's largest 'ghost city' booms again thanks to education fever. 2021-04-20. Nikkei Asia. en-GB.
  9. News: Jody Rosen. The Colossal Strangeness of China's Most Excellent Tourist City. March 9, 2015. The New York Times Travel Magazine. March 6, 2015. It's nice here," said one of the women. "My hometown is a tiny place in the grassland. The people here are more well educated. There's so much more to do here." What is there to do in Ordos? "I hang out with my friends. We study at the library. We go to the mall..
  10. News: Eli Bildner. Ordos: A Ghost Town That Isn't In this interview, two documentary filmmakers profile the surprising liveliness of Ordos, a Chinese city famous for its emptiness.. March 9, 2015. TeaLeafNation via Atlantic. April 8, 2013. The government has moved its officials into the new town, and they've also moved some of the city's best schools into the new town, to try to bring in young people..
  11. Web site: China's Ghost Town. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/0h7V3Twb-Qk . 2021-12-21 . live. Al Jazeera. 10 November 2009. 2010-12-21.
  12. Web site: Inside China's Runaway Building Boom. https://web.archive.org/web/20100329141231/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1975336,00.html. dead. March 29, 2010. Bill Powell. Time magazine. April 5, 2010. 2010-12-21.
  13. Web site: China: boom or bust?. Robert Peston. Robert Peston. BBC News. 11 November 2010. 2010-11-13.
  14. Li, Y. . Quyu Fenhua Jiaju, Guicheng Eerduosi Weihe Sierbujiang. Zhengjuan Shibao, February 26. http://sz.house.qq.coma20140227010924_all.htm.
  15. 2015-03-01. Ordos Municipality: A market-era resource boomtown. Cities. en. 43. 115–132. 10.1016/j.cities.2014.11.017. 0264-2751. Woodworth . Max D. .
  16. Web site: Shepard . Wade . China's Most Infamous 'Ghost City' Is Rising From The Desert . 2023-09-26 . Forbes . en.