
High-Density Living in China: Modern Marvel or Ticking Time Bomb? | Digging into China
China's residential neighborhoods often decay rapidly, showing signs of age after just 10-15 years—peeling walls, faulty elevators, overgrown greenery, and broken facilities. This "institutional premature aging" stems from developers cutting corners for quick profits and local governments prioritizing GDP via land finance, pushing ultra-high-density developments.
High-rises maximize land value but sacrifice quality, safety, and maintenance. Issues like poor soundproofing, frequent conflicts, fire risks, and pandemic vulnerabilities highlight the flaws. Drawing parallels to Soviet Khrushchev buildings, this model burdens residents with long-term costs.
In contrast, low-density living offers better governance, family space, and resilience. Despite ample land, systemic incentives trap people in cramped "concrete jungles." True reform requires shifting from short-term gains to sustainable urban planning.
Help me grow the channel by donating any amount through the link below—your support makes a difference!
https://paypal.me/DonXiang
Email me: [email protected]
