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Chinese Eco-Cities Not Growing to Plan

Enthusiam for Chinese eco-cities has turned to skepticism, as urban designers, architects and planners face one of the biggest obstacles to sustainable development: ultra-fast growth.

Many of the original plans for Chinese eco-cities like Dongtan and Huangbaiyu have gone awry. The Chinese village of Huangbaiyu was to be transformed into a green village, with hundreds of energy-efficient homes constructed with state-of-the-art material that would not harm the environment. 

That was in 2005. Two years on, a recent progress report by Newsweek is bleak: "The project appears to be a mess. Construction of the 400 houses is way behind schedule. The 42 that have been built still have no heat, electricity or running water. Walls are already cracking and moisture seeps through the ceilings.

"According to people who’ve worked on the project, many of the houses don’t adhere to the original specifications—meaning they could never achieve the energy savings they were meant to achieve. The biomass gasification facility meant to burn animal, human and agricultural waste, doesn’t work. Not surprisingly, no one in the village has volunteered to move into the new community."

Likewise Dongtan, the much-hyped 'demonstration' eco-city to be built by UK engineering firm Arup, is shaping up to be more of a gated community for the wealthy than a brand new, ecological approach to urban development.  A recent feature by Wired has tracked some of the challenges faced by designers of this pop-up city of Shanghai. 

To the folk at Worldchanging, who point to the number of recent articles questioning China's current green growth potential, the problem with trying to get sustainable urban infrastructure built in China right now is that too much is geared toward growth and excess, not restraint:

"People in developed countries have had a few decades to try out and reject excess. It isn't just an awareness of environmental degradation that pushes us to go green; it's a knowledge, gleaned from firsthand experience, that conventional living generates a level of waste that makes us uncomfortable. In urban China, however, bigger is still better. Most middle-class Chinese are still preoccupied with finding ways to display their wealth, not minimize its impact on the world."  

The stakes are high for China's eco-cities. Such are the boom times, it is to China that many of the world's best and brightest urban designers are turning to implement new ideas about sustainable design. Arup, for example, would like to apply lessons from Dongtan to a pair of new developments in San Francisco and Napa County. 

If the progress reports to date are true, we should all hope they're learning from their mistakes. 

Image: Dongtan city - eco-city or gated community? Words by Sarah Barns

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Titles such as Ancient Maya: The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilization fill faculty bookshelves. It has also provided fodder for literature and films, most recently Mel Gibson's Apocalypto. There is a grim, irresistible appeal to this tale of central American oblivion. Recent events have injected a jarring note into Mayan studies: a sense of anxiety, even foreboding. Serious people are asking a question that at first sounds ridiculous. What if the fate of the Maya is to be our fate? What if climate change and the global financial crisis are harbingers of a system that is destined to warp, buckle and collapse?

No one is suggesting that vines will start crawling up the concrete canyons of Wall Street, or that howler monkeys will chase pin-striped bankers through Manhattan. Mayan kings who screwed up were ritually tortured and sacrificed with the aid of stingray spines to pierce the penis; an emphatic application of moral hazard. In our era, the only thing slashed is a bonus. There are, however, striking parallels between the Maya fall and our era's convulsions. "We think we are different," says Jared Diamond, the American evolutionary biologist. "In fact . . . all of those powerful societies of the past thought that they too were unique, right up to the moment of their collapse."

Complex and organised it may have been but Mayan society resembled a frog who stays in slowly boiling water. The environmental trouble built up over centuries and was partly concealed by short-term fluctuations in rainfall patterns and harvest yields. But when the tipping point came, events moved quickly. "Their success was built on very thin ice. Kings were supposed to keep order and avoid chaos through rituals and sacrifice," says David Webster, author of The Fall of the Ancient Maya. "When manifestly they couldn't do it people lost confidence and the whole system of kingship fell apart."

Which brings us to modern parallels. Webster, watching the season's first snowflakes through the window of his office at Pennsylvania State University, has been waiting for the question. Pinned to his wall is an old clipping about the fall of Enron Corporation in 2001. "That was the first tremor," he muses. "You know, human beings are always surprised when things collapse just when they seem most successful. We look around and we think we're fat, we're clever, we're comfortable and we don't think we're on the edge of something nasty. Hubris? No: ignorance."

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