(1)
(a) Brian Dumaine, Rethinking China's Cities. Urban desiner Peter Calthorpe is working to make the country's explosive growth more sustainable.
http://management.fortune.cnn.co ... horpe-china-cities/
Calthorpe says:
"The urban Chinese live in neighborhoods where buildings average 10 stories, whereas in America it's two stories.
"As the Chinese create more and more superblocks of apartments and giant shopping centers, they're destroying a whole stratum of their traditional walkable society. * * * Each superblock has repetitious, high-rise apartment towers with a total of around 5,000 units. My design is made up of small urban blocks with green courtyards, each having only 500 units, where you can walk or bike to eat and shop -- where neighbors can actually recognize one another. The buildings will vary from four stories to 30 stories. And this design will house the same number of people per acre while leaving enough open space for parks and greenways.
(b) 小亨利·M·保尔森, 中国必须采用全新的城市化途径. 纽约时报中文网, Dec 6, 2012.
http://cn.nytimes.com/article/opinion/2012/12/06/c06paulson/
, which is translated from
Henry M Paulson Jr, How Cities Can Save China; Smarter urban growth could help the country's environment. New York Times, Dec 5, 2012 (op-ed)
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/0 ... can-save-china.html
("Within city centers are countless “superblocks” — half-kilometer-square developments interspersed with huge boulevards that create monster traffic jams and skyrocketing pollution. In response, an approach that featured smaller blocks and mixed-use neighborhoods and accessible public transportation would alleviate these unintended consequences. Such 'livable cities' would balance economic development with energy efficiency, improve air quality and reduce congestion")
My comment:
(a) There is no need toread the rest of the English-language NYT article.
(b) The article introduces Mr Paulson as "a former chief executive of Goldman Sachs and Treasury secretary, is the chairman of the Paulson Institute [at University of Chicago]."
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