South China Morning Post

Misery of ‘rotten-tail building’ victims

Homes dream turns into nightmare for residents of unfinished Xian flats

- Yingjie Wang yingjie.wang@scmp.com

At 9pm 67-year-old Li Zhu’e was hobbling up the stairs to her 13th-floor flat after using the public toilet in her compound’s yard. Since the stairwell has no lighting, she held an electric torch in her right hand illuminati­ng the steps as she climbed.

Li suffered a serious car accident in 2019. After two surgeries, a large piece of flesh was removed from her right leg, and she still has 12 metal pins in her lower back, limiting her ability to walk.

The place Li calls “home” is an unfinished building, colloquial­ly known as a “rotten-tail building” in China, with no electricit­y, no running water, a lift that does not work and no sewage system.

To illuminate her apartment, Li’s daughter-in-law bought a solar light, which they charge on her balcony during the day; to cook they use a small gas stove, and to drink, they cart bottles of water up from downstairs two to three times a day.

There are now more than 300 families living in four out of 13 rotten-tail buildings in Li’s compound in Xian, the capital of Shaanxi province.

“It’s cold sleeping here at night and we don’t take off our clothes [when we go to bed],” Li told the Post. “We don’t have many requests now; if the government can help us with getting electricit­y and running water, we will be happy.”

Most of the homeowners bought the flats in 2013. The constructi­on was halted in 2016 when the developer experience­d financial difficulti­es.

In 2018 they were informed the developer had declared bankruptcy. The project had remained unfinished for most of the past decade.

Many of the more than 1,200 homeowners have tried countless times to get help from authoritie­s, and Li Ke, 33, is one of them.

Li Ke spent about 500,000 yuan (HK$593,500) on a 1,011 sq ft flat which was supposed to be his home after his wedding.

However, his daughter is now six years old.

“We go to the district government several times a month to petition,” Li said, “but we haven’t got a clear response yet.”

At present, the compound is still under constructi­on organised by the government, the court, the bankruptcy reorganisa­tion administra­tor and the developer, however, the owners still cannot breathe a sigh of relief.

“We finally decided to move in because the administra­tor told us in February that ‘when the final court decision comes out, these flats may not belong to you’,” Li said.

According to Li, the entrance has been blocked three times without notice to prevent people from entering, and the homeowners also pushed the fence down three times.

“They only informed us later that it was for constructi­on purposes, but we don’t believe them,” Li said.

Some homeowners moved in believing this is the only way they can defend their property ownership, while many others did it because they could no longer afford to rent a place and pay a mortgage on a separate home.

Qu Pingrong, 55, a chef, was out of work for three months in 2021 as the restaurant industry suffered due to the pandemic.

His wife was jobless for five months.

“Our landlord raised our rent by almost 24 per cent to 2,100 yuan a month, which we couldn’t afford as we still have a 200,000 yuan outstandin­g debt,” Qu said.

He chose to buy a flat here because through the window he could see the village where he grew up and his parents still live there.

However, what was once a dream has become a nightmare.

According to a Tencent survey conducted this year, more than 45 per cent of homebuyers on the mainland encounter unfinished building problems.

Data collected by digital website The Paper in 2020 shows unfinished buildings nationwide can take on average a further 2.1 years to be completed after the original promised delivery date, with the longest on record taking an extra 22 years.

Wang Yuchen, a real estate lawyer based in Beijing, said the number of unfinished buildings may increase in the short term due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and the downturn in China’s volatile real estate market.

 ?? Photos: Imaginechi­na ?? Li Ke sits in the unfinished flat that was supposed to be home after he got married. His daughter is now six years old.
Photos: Imaginechi­na Li Ke sits in the unfinished flat that was supposed to be home after he got married. His daughter is now six years old.
 ?? ?? Residents struggle to leave their homes in Xian, Shaanxi province.
Residents struggle to leave their homes in Xian, Shaanxi province.

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