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China's quest to build the biggest & tallest

Posted: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 11:12 AM
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By Adrienne Mong, NBC News Producer

HANGZHOU, China – It's become a truism (and a complaint) that most stories that take us out of Beijing require a flight, plus a four-hour drive. In the past two months, our NBC News team has criss-crossed the country, gathering story elements for features that will be broadcast when the Summer Olympics finally kicks off in August.

So we'd become a bit blasé about the reach of development witnessed in every far-flung corner of China until one particularly long road journey when our cameraman Dmitry Solovyov, on assignment here from Moscow, made the observation that, "The roads here are excellent. We do not have roads like this in Russia. Certainly not everywhere like here."

Adrienne Mong / NBC News
The Hangzhou Bay Bridge spans 22 miles across Hangzhou Bay.

He's right, of course. We have traveled down four-lane highways that, were it not for the rice paddies and water buffalo, could be anywhere in the United States or Europe.

But while road engineering may be one of the most beneficial aspects of China's progress, it's not the most fascinating aspect about its sprint to first-world development status.

More compelling is the Chinese authorities' apparent obsession with building superlatives: the world's biggest dam, the world's biggest airport terminal, Asia's tallest skyscraper and the world's highest railway. You get the picture.

Symbols of political power or intellectual heft?  
This obsession with creating and surmounting engineering challenges has not gone unnoticed.  Critics of the central Chinese government dismiss these high-profile projects and massive infrastructure schemes as nothing more than political or nationalistic grandstanding, symbols that reinforce Beijing's power and authority.

Especially when it comes to the splashy landmarks built in the capital itself. "In the new Beijing, the state only protected sites that served to bolster its own self-justifying version of history," wrote Jasper Becker in a new book, "City of Heavenly Tranquillity."

Becker noted that the destruction and reconstruction seen in the capital has not been limited to Beijing, "Across the country hundreds of historic cities, towns and villages have been torn down in the greatest act of historical vandalism in Chinese history."

Others might argue otherwise.  An architecture critic in the New York Times recently wrote, "[T]hese buildings are not simply blunt expressions of power. Like the great monuments of 16th-century Rome or 19th-century Paris, China's new architecture exudes an aura that has as much to do with intellectual ferment as economic clout."

Hangzhou Bay Bridge
Adrienne Mong / NBC News
Driving down the world's longest sea bridge, where drivers are not allowed to stop.

The technocrats  
But perhaps there's one other consideration, one that might go a long way in explaining China's determination to out-build everyone else: a technocrat leadership that believes building is the key to sustained economic growth. 

A prime example is China’s President Hu Jintao, who started out as a hydropower engineer and cut his Communist Party teeth for several years at a provincial branch of the now-defunct Ministry of Water Resources and Electric Power.

This concentration of talent in engineering and other physical sciences is also reflected at the local level. "Most city officials were trained as civil engineers and appointed from outside the area they governed. During Beijing's Olympics bid, the party-appointed mayor was from Jiangsu province, and had majored at university in iron smelting," wrote Michael Meyer in his newly-published book "The Last Days of Old Beijing," a highly engaging history of Beijing's hutongs – the narrow streets and alleys that traditionally characterized the city. In Meyer’s view, "the government prioritized construction and modernization" above all else.

Another engineering breakthrough 
Standing at the edge of a pier overlooking Hangzhou Bay Bridge, we gazed at the latest emblem of progress. 

The world's longest sea bridge, spanning 22 miles, was disappearing into the hazy distance this scorching summer afternoon. Connecting Shanghai directly to Ningbo in neighbouring Zhejiang Province, Hangzhou Bay Bridge opened this past May to great fanfare.

"The bridge has been hailed as a 'Made-in-China' model in large infrastructure construction that fully uses home- grown technologies and demonstrates the country's architectural expertise," reported Xinhua. The state-run news agency went on to say that, during construction, the project "had survived 19 severe challenges, including typhoons, sea tides and geological problems."

But the bridge's builders did not account for China's gawkers.

Within days of its opening, the $1.76 billion Hangzhou Bay Bridge was becoming famous for an unexpected special feature: car accidents. 

The special viewing platform built to the side of the six-lane bridge was nowhere near completion, leaving drivers with no space to pause. So many people were stopping to gawk at the much-vaunted engineering and causing so much mayhem that police began cracking down on dawdling drivers and enforcing a minimum speed of 50 mph.

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Comments

All this talk about up and coming China as being like us. Yeah sure it is. The fact is the disparity over in China between the rich and the poor is ridiculous. For example, the Chinese communist government leases property to developers who then build modern buildings on the newly leased property. However, in order to do that they very often have to buy out existing home owners on that property and quite often only offer them half the money the property is worth. If the home owner refuses they can stay in the property but many times now go without electricity and clean water.

Also, unlike the United States if you hire a lawyer to file a law suit against the government then good luck because too often regardless of how much money a lawyer is offered they will not take the case. The one's that have can end up jail even if they are proven right because the government turns it around and accuses them of being traitors and will then put them in jail.

The United States is not arrogant, we are a free people with rights to freedom unlike any other country in the world.

Tall buildings, and big bridges do not define how well off a country is, but it is how they treat their own people. It is a fact that in China right now it is all about how much you have, how much material goods you have that indicates where you are in Chinese society. Granted, we have that here as well but unlike China poorer people here have other recourses but in China you better have material goods or you are poor without any recourse regardless.

Right now the US economy is in tough shape, or is it? Most people around the world have been paying higher gas prices for years but we have just started that. We still have the best economy in thw world bar none and in no other country can someone come from nothing and make something of themselves to the scale that we can.

Don't like something in China because your poor? too bad because if you protest that then be ready to go to jail. If you get labeled as one of them that wants to file lawsuits against the government for what we as Americans would consider a basic human right because of the in justice did to us then you try that there and your phone is tapped, the police follow you etc.

Go ahead, support China, be naive and think they are making great strides because under that blanket of new pretty buildings is an oppressed people.

By the way, the Chinese are building a huge military, any idea why?

By the way, I did not learn all my political beliefs on some college campus. I learned them by being all over the world for 20+ years and seeing first hand with my own eyse.
China on the way to a economic superpower, is  hopefully also finding a real identity. Without finding a way between the old tradition and the western way of thinking, it could fail. And we would not wish, that this will happen.- Social develeopement and ecconomical developement must happen at the same time. This unfortunaltely, I missed to find and makes me deeply worried.
I am living in China since 5 years and I still  surprised day by day about their hospitable , natural and friendly way of living even their life is hard and full of challanges, everyday . I hope we all dont forget that we live in one world and struggeling for the same goal, a better wold for all of us.
Just it is good to look at things the other way round. I am really surprised by some of the views quesioning why China grew and became the world biggest dam builder and road engineer. The question should have been 'how did it?'.We Ethiopian have much to take from Chinese.Keep china growing|
As a first generation immigrant from China, I admire and respect America and it's people.  Most Americans are intelligent, generous, open minded and good-willed which makes the country #1 (leader) in all aspects.  I am pleased to again see these features from several comments above.  I have not regretted a bit of my immigration decision after years even at the big cost of leaving close family behind and being a minority.  

Meanwhile I am proud of China's rapid growth in recent years.  It proves the Chinese' capability. It is not an easy task with such a big population, low infrastructure level and inefficient social/legal system.  I agree that the US has contributed to China's growth at a certain degree voluntarily or involuntarily.  

I don't think American people need to be nervous or see China as a thread.  Living and working in China for decades, knowing the heavy history of China and being a Chinese myself, I have to admit reluctantly that China is not and will not be greater than US because China is not an immigrant country, it is not as tolerant to the difference as the US, it is not as strategic as the US.  I wish the Chinese people could see and learn good aspects in Americans and get rid of the unhealthy ones.  I hope to see the day when the US and China become allies.  Then the whole world would be benefited from it.  Will the day come?
The countries, like people,like everything,have two sides. A person of intellect should make comments based on fare information. Every country including U.S. has both poor and rich, if you only focus on the bad things, no county can you live. I can tell from the above comments that some guys are jealous . Because of jealousy, they just ingnore the beatiful things of others. We can understand this kind of reaction, we are ordinary persons, right? However, I have to say that several commenters above are really extremists. usually, extremists are either under-educated or genetically retard, we really can not blame them, just ingnore their stupid sentences.
This isn't a competition to see who is better. Both countries have their strengths and weaknesses and need to learn from each other.  


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