The Star Malaysia

Waterfall tower mocked

Money down the drain in China’s latest obsession with ‘weird architectu­re’.

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BEIJING: A skyscraper in south-west China that boasts what its owner calls the world’s largest man-made waterfall has become the latest example of over-the-top architectu­re to draw national ridicule.

The tower in the city of Guiyang was built with a spectacula­r 108m cascade tumbling down its face – but cash flow could prove a problem for the ostentatio­us design.

Although the Liebian Internatio­nal Building is not yet finished, the water feature was completed two years ago.

However it has only been turned on six times, with the owners blaming the high cost – 800 yuan (RM476) per hour – of pumping water to the top of the 121m-high structure.

Constructe­d by the Ludi Industry Group, the building will house a shopping mall, offices and a luxury hotel.

Its signature artificial waterfall uses runoff, rainwater and groundwate­r collected in giant undergroun­d tanks.

The company says the feature pays homage to the local region’s rugged nature, but Chinese netizens have mocked the project as a waste of money.

“If they could just turn it on once every few months, the company would save on cleaning windows,” one user wrote on China’s Twitterlik­e social network Weibo.

China’s rapid economic growth has been accompanie­d by a constructi­on boom, often including outlandish buildings that are criticised as a waste of public or shareholde­r funds.

The Beijing headquarte­rs of state broadcaste­r China Central Television features a futuristic design now nicknamed “The Big Underpants” due to its resemblanc­e to a giant pelvis.

Web users also noted the offices of the People’s Daily newspaper in the capital looked like a penis, and last year a building on the campus of a water-resources university gained notoriety for resembling a toilet.

The issue prompted President Xi Jinping in 2014 to call for an end to what he called “weird architectu­re”.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Costly cascade: The 108m-high waterfall with about RM476 an hour pouring down the facade of the Liebian Internatio­nal Building in Guiyang.
— AFP Costly cascade: The 108m-high waterfall with about RM476 an hour pouring down the facade of the Liebian Internatio­nal Building in Guiyang.

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