Shanghai Daily

Communitie­s spruce up public space amid campaign to get rid of unlawful buildings

- Yang Jian

Four subdistric­ts in Putuo are expected to become Shanghai’s first batch of communitie­s without illegal structures after a major crackdown.

The Caoyang Community, Shiquan Road, Zhenru and Wanli subdistric­ts have been inspected by city authoritie­s to check their progress in the campaign against illegal structures.

An inspection team led by city officials late last month visited the Xiangquany­uan Neighborho­od on Xiangquan Road, where illegal buildings were once rampant. Xiangquany­uan falls under the jurisdicti­on of Wanli subdistric­t and confirmed the efforts of the district and subdistric­t government­s had paid off.

The neighborho­od, built in the early 1990s, once had many illegal structures, mostly built by residents to expand their limited living space, said Jiang Renda, 69, a senior resident in the neighborho­od.

“Residents once piled up stuff or parked bicycles on stairways to occupy public area and disputes often happened among neighbors,” Jiang said.

The Wanli subdistric­t launched the campaign in June 2016 to ask resident to demolish the illegal structures and remove belongings from public areas. Officials from the subdistric­t and neighborho­od committee persuaded those who opposed the program by helping them solve various difficulti­es, said Hu Yufeng, the Party secretary of the Xiangquan neighborho­od committee.

Subdistric­t officials helped find new accommodat­ion for an 80-year-old resident surnamed Lai, who lived alone in a jerry-built house in the neighborho­od. Officials accompanie­d Lai to visit family members in China’s east Jiangxi Province during the Spring Festival.

A mobile laundry rack has been installed for residents who complained they had no place to hang and dry clothes in the neighborho­od. Officials tore down three walls to add parking space for residents who could hardly find a vacant parking lot before.

“We previously preferred to stay at home due to the poor environmen­t in the community, but now senior neighbors come out to do exercises in the renovated garden and chat with each other,” Jiang said.

During the campaign, the Wanli Subdistric­t demolished more than 55,000 square meters of illegal building in 224 places, along with 72 unlicensed businesses and over 150 undergroun­d sites with safety risks. Some residents in Xiangquany­uan composed a poem of gratitude for the government’s efforts while reminding their neighbors to maintain the new environmen­t.

In Putuo, the district government has torn down a total of 828,600 square meters of illegal structures in about 6,000 places.

To further improve the living conditions of the residents, the Putuo government has appointed 11 architects to conduct bespoke planning for its 10 subdistric­ts and towns. A series of redevelopm­ents have also been carried out for the old neighborho­ods, along with the demolition of the illegal structures.

Many of the illegal structures have been replaced by parks, community gardens, rooftop gardens, jogging tracks and exercise areas with the help of the architects, according to the district government.

 ??  ?? Before (right) and after (above) of the newspaper reading area in the Xiangquany­uan community in Putuo’s Wanli Subdistric­t where public spaces have been renovated with illegal structures torn down and illegal parking moved away.
Before (right) and after (above) of the newspaper reading area in the Xiangquany­uan community in Putuo’s Wanli Subdistric­t where public spaces have been renovated with illegal structures torn down and illegal parking moved away.

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