Opinion / You Nuo
Corporate hub is too crowded
By You Nuo (China Daily)
Updated: 2005-09-26 05:32
Twice a day and five days a week, I want to sing a song in my heart: I
will surely cry for you, Beijing CBD-ya! Those who have lived long enough
in China know the exclamatory "ya" is absolutely needed to emphasize
emotions.
In this case, it is all because of the hopelessly clogged-up traffic in
the streets that run across this Central Business District.
It defies one's imagination to think how any new streets can be added to
a space where concrete towers are wedged so densely. It would perhaps be
as costly as in Hong Kong's Central District, and at a risk of budget
that overruns. And the budget for having more other services and
conveniences there is enormous, not to mention meeting the standard for
emergency evacuation and anti-terrorist drills.
With that amount of finance, municipal planners may just as well build a
new business district - anyplace where access by major streets is better.
On the vast North China plain, there is plenty of space for a new city
with good streets and not-so-tall buildings, surrounded by apple and pear
orchards, which people there traditionally grow, and ideally with some
rivers and mountains in the background, lined by weeping willows and
dotted by one or two white pagodas.
This, so far as I can see, may be a more doable idea than constructing
more costly roads to connect the Guomao Bridge (on the East Third Ring
Road) with anywhere else, whether in the city or outside it.
Recently, I have heard about a plan for building Beijing's second airport
(the present one is too crowded) in Hebei Province, somewhere between
Beijing and Tianjin.
So if Beijing's alternative airport can be located outside the city, why
can't its alternative business district? Its travel conveniences may be a
big selling point to new tenants. If it can offer them a remarkable
working and living environment, which I am sure China can deliver with
its building prowess, many international companies would move there
happily.
And from the business point of view, nowadays any group of new buildings
is just a development project with a name to identify its intended
functions. It is not like a neighbourhood where you grow up and feel sad
about leaving.
In fact, for the past six years, I have worked in either one of the CBD's
office buildings or have had to pass them every day on the way to my
office. But I hardly feel anything about it, except the annoyance with
the endless questions and uncertainties it has brought to me:
How can I be on time for a business meeting at 9 am? In 2000, it took me
15 minutes from my home to Guomao, or China International Trade Centre.
Now I would be lucky to get there within one hour.
How can I get a taxi at 6 pm under the Guomao Bridge when it starts to
rain? Some of the city's cab drivers have told me they try not to go to
the CBD in rush hours to avoid its "sticky congee-like" jam.
How can I, at 8 pm, buy some flowers for my wife on my way from my office
to where we are going to have dinner? One year ago, there was a 24-hour
florist in Guomao's back alley. Now it has gone, to make way for another
office building project.
How can I get some fresh air during the dry winter when the flu and lots
of coughs start spreading among the staff - without taking an elevator
trip down 35 storeys?
How can I accompany my client, who is an international celebrity, to meet
officials in Jinrong Jie, another financial street on the other side of
town, when Chang'an Avenue is under traffic control for some government
activities? Take the subway?
But, please, don't take me as just a complainer. I am drumming for more
development.
(China Daily 09/26/2005 page4)
Hot Talks
� President's List of Do's and Don'ts for China
� How important is 'Face' (Mian Zi) to everyone?
� The Woeful Health of the Nation
� China, USA should be natural allies
� Beijing's leverage over Taiwan
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
Learn Chinese, Chinese Online Class, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments:
Post a Comment