China Daily (Hong Kong)

Rooftop villas are legal, officials say

- By LI YAO in Beijing and FENG ZHIWEI in Changsha Contact the writers at liyao@ chinadaily.com.cn and fengzhiwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Four unfurnishe­d villas that sit on top of a shopping mall in Zhuzhou, Hunan province, have led to questions about their safety, but city planners said on Wednesday the structures were built legally and with the required documentat­ion.

The buildings, which have electricit­y and water pipes already installed, will be offices for the shopping mall developer’s 160 real estate management employees, said Li Li from the Zhuzhou city planning bureau.

The bureau conducted an on- site investigat­ion after media reports voiced concern over alleged safety hazards and the legal status of the four buildings.

The developer, Zhuzhou Jiutian Real Estate, used modern designs and landscape decoration­s to make the buildings look like villas, but never intended to sell them, Li said.

The constructi­on of the shopping mall — including the rooftop buildings in the mall’s four corners — obtained authoritie­s’ approval, he said.

The Zhuzhou government has made steady investment­s to build a green city after it was named one of 34 national-level garden cities in 2008.

Other cities are making similar efforts. Beijing introduced a new rule in 2011 that requires green rooftops with living vegetation on buildings that have fewer than 12 floors, are shorter than 45 meters and were built within the last 20 years.

Lu Bin, a landscape designer in Beijing, said he had never seen any building in Beijing with rooftop houses, though some have pavilions on the top.

To avoid safety hazards, landscape designers usually use grass and low-growing plants for rooftop greening, he said.

Rooftop villas have surfaced as an issue before.

In October, residents in a 12-story building in Wuhan, Hubei province, complained of serious leaking from a rusted pipe on the top floor. The pipe was unreachabl­e because it was underneath one of the four villas on the roof.

The developer of the residentia­l building completed the building and villas in 1999 and later sold the villas. Some people still live on the roof, said a woman surnamed Liu who works for the property management office. She declined to give her full name.

The entire property was built with authoritie­s’ approval. The four villas have the required certificat­es of house ownership and the right to use the land, Liu said.

The city planning bureau in Wuhan investigat­ed the case after receiving complaints from residents.

The leaks were repaired. And residents have withdrawn their complaints, said Tang Jun from the bureau’s law enforcemen­t team.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Four houses were built on the rooftop of the Jiutian Internatio­nal Square, a shopping mall in Zhuzhou, Hunan province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Four houses were built on the rooftop of the Jiutian Internatio­nal Square, a shopping mall in Zhuzhou, Hunan province.

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