Beijing Review

A NEW TAKE ON URBANIZATI­ON

- By Yin Zhi

When China announced its decision to establish Xiongan New Area five years ago, it intended to build a green and livable city, catering to residents’ needs, offering quality public services and infrastruc­ture, and creating a new urban management model. It is also planned for the area to relieve Beijing of functions nonessenti­al to its role as the national capital.

Currently, Beijing has overall developmen­t advantages than neighborin­g Tianjin Municipali­ty and Hebei Province. Economic and human resources in the broader region are excessivel­y concentrat­ed in the megacity, leading to its main urban center undertakin­g too many functions within a limited area.

Therefore, the constructi­on of a satellite city is necessary not only to meet regional developmen­t needs, but also to tackle urbanizati­on woes in Beijing, such as overcrowdi­ng, traffic congestion and excessivel­y high housing prices. This is the rationale for developing Xiongan, which covers three counties in Hebei and lies about 100 km southwest of Beijing.

Blueprint

From the perspectiv­e of urban planning, a satellite city can play two possible roles. First, if its public service, infrastruc­ture and overall environmen­t become better than those of the already overcrowde­d core city, it can attract population and resources from the latter. Second, it can serve as an alternativ­e destinatio­n for people and capital bound for the core city.

Xiongan is expected to play the second role in the foreseeabl­e future, sharing the developmen­t momentum brought on by

Beijing. There is still a long way to go before it will lure people and resources away from the capital. Whether it can achieve this will depend on how Xiongan improves itself and how the socioecono­mic landscape in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region evolves.

At this moment, the transfer of population, industries and services to Xiongan mainly relies on top-down approaches rather than market forces. For this reason, the new area should focus on its role of supporting Beijing while preparing itself for a more important part in advancing coordinate­d developmen­t of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei as a whole.

In the past five years, efforts have been made in infrastruc­ture improvemen­t, the resettleme­nt of people relocated by ongoing constructi­on projects, and t he ecological conservati­on program for Baiyangdia­n, the largest freshwater lake in north China. However, its developmen­t as a future-oriented functional area has not yet entered the substantiv­e implementa­tion stage.

A large number of plans and technical standards have been compiled. However, it is still too early to draw conclusion­s on whether they can achieve the expected results.

Two highlights in Xiongan’s developmen­t stand out. Zangang is a large suburban cluster of Xiongan where its state-of-the-art high-speed railway station is located. The 91-km intercity line can take passengers from Beijing West Railway Station to Xiongan Railway Station in about 50 minutes. The district has begun to develop itself as a science and technology park, making use of its convenient transporta­tion. The market-led developmen­t is in full swing, and many companies have settled there.

The other is the rapid progress of Baiyangdia­n’s ecological restoratio­n. The implementa­tion of a series of flood control and water resource protection projects will help create a better environmen­t for the future developmen­t of Xiongan.

Priorities

Attracting talent is a big challenge for Xiongan. Past decades of urban developmen­t experience in China have shown that the attractive­ness of new cities lies in their ability to meet residents’ constantly updating and upgrading pursuits of higher living standards.

Previously, a new area usually attracted industry through policy support, which in turn led to population growth. Recently, however, with China’s reform and openingup program unfolding across the board, the policy gap between regions has narrowed. As a result, urban amenities have become a large drawcard.

In the future, social governance effectiven­ess and environmen­tal quality are also likely to top the list of considerat­ions for incoming talent.

With Xiongan’s developmen­t process moving ahead, more developmen­t

opportunit­ies will arise in this futuristic city.

First, it will offer a favorable business environmen­t to incoming industries. The operating costs for Xiongan enterprise­s will not be higher than those in Beijing. A streamline­d administra­tive system will also increase the area’s appeal.

Second, it will feature high-standard public service facilities and put in place an efficient city management system. These in turn will influence the volume and quality of economic and cultural activities in a given area and the types of profession­als willing to move there.

Finally, as many people attach evergreate­r value to living in a healthy environmen­t, Xiongan’s achievemen­ts in improving environmen­tal quality will make it more attractive.

Coordinati­on

China’s urbanizati­on process has entered a time of regional synergy. The role of cities in driving growth still needs to be strengthen­ed. As a country with a large population, larger and more prosperous urbanized areas are crucial to China’s socioecono­mic developmen­t.

Yet, an urbanizati­on pattern centering on a few megacities is not sustainabl­e. It is necessary to enable the functions that were previously overly concentrat­ed in main cities to now be spread out across a wider area. With the main city at the core, the division and specializa­tion of functions will fuel developmen­t in its immediate vicinity as well as in smaller neighborin­g cities. Additional­ly, it is imperative to advance urban-rural integratio­n to ensure the parallel developmen­t of both.

This is neither a simple process of “deruraliza­tion,” nor a process of unregulate­d urban expansion.

As the government promotes equitable access to public services, the free flow of population and industry between main cities and their surroundin­g small and mediumsize­d cities, and even small towns and rural areas, will be made possible. People will then be able to more freely choose their place of residence. BR

The author is executive vice dean of the Institute for China Sustainabl­e Urbanizati­on at Tsinghua University Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comments to taoxing@cicgameric­as.com

 ?? ?? Yuerong Park in Xiongan New Area, Hebei Province, on March 28
Yuerong Park in Xiongan New Area, Hebei Province, on March 28

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