Beijing issues blueprint for livability

For the first time, plan will restrict the city's growth and expansion, giving top priority to resources
A blueprint for Beijing's development over the next 20 years has drawn three "red lines" to ensure that the city becomes a livable and harmonious capital, according to the municipal government.
More details of the development plan of Beijing (2016-35), which was approved by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council on Sept 27, were released on Sept 29, with the city setting limits on its population and land for development and increasing land for ecological protection.
The city aims to hold its population to 23 million by 2020, with 10.85 million in the city's six core districts. The number of registered residents now stands at 21.73 million.
The land used for construction will be reduced from 2,921 square kilometers in 2015 to 2,860 sq km by 2020, and will be further cut to 2,760 sq km by 2035, it said.
Meanwhile, its ecological areas - which include mountains, forests, rivers and lakes, conservation areas, nature reserves and scenic spots - will make up 73 percent of the city's area by 2020, and will increase to 75 percent by 2035.
The plan also set targets to relieve traffic congestion, control housing prices, improve air quality and preserve cultural heritage in Beijing.
Municipal officials told a news conference on Sept 29 that by setting water, land and energy resources as a top priority, Beijing is expected to see stress on the city ease.
The plan - the seventh of its kind since the People's Republic of China was founded in 1949 - is the first to restrict the growth and expansion of the city, says Ke Huanzhang, vice-president of the China Association of City Planning.
"The plans before were all about city expansion, especially in terms of population and land assigned for construction and development. This new plan, however, has reduced those targets, which is a new highlight as well as a breakthrough," he says.
"What's important is that concrete measures are needed to restrain and manage (actions that might challenge the red lines). I hope the new planning can solve the urban problems that Beijing encounters in its development. Only when the red lines are safeguarded can Beijing develop into a world-class national capital that is both harmonious and livable."
Zhang Yi contributed to this story.
(China Daily Africa Weekly 10/06/2017 page3)
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