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  • Chengdu's New Century Global Centre

    wonder what Jim Kunstler thinks of this colossus . . .


    Largest building in the world opens in China – complete with indoor seaside

    Chengdu's New Century Global Centre has its own beach resort, cinemas, shops – and a replica Mediterranean village




    Beneath smoggy clouds in the Chinese mega-city of Chengdu, waves lap against sandy shores and a salty breeze blows across the beach. 6,000 holidaymakers look out on a glowing sunset, dining on platters of "the rarest oceanic fish species", while a stage rises from the water, ready for the evening's multimedia music spectacular. China's fourth largest city may be 620 miles from the coast, but that hasn't stopped it having its own seaside – newly opened inside the biggest building in the world.


    A 100m tall cliff-face of blue mirrored glass, stretching 500m along a triumphal plaza, the New Century Global Centre houses an entire seaside resort, along with a 14-screen Imax cinema, Olympic-sized ice rink, two five-star hotels and its own Mediterranean shopping village – all wrapped with a vast ribbon of offices. Sprawling for 1.7m square metres, it could fit 20 Sydney Opera Houses beneath its glass roof. It is declared by its creators to be "a landmark which commands the world and is looked upon by the world with respect," a pleasure dome that Kubla Khan could only dream of.


    Positioned at the heart of the city's Tianfu district, a new hub for finance, IT and biochemical industries, the building squats like an overfed prize fowl, teetering out in all directions and looming above a neighbouring art centre by Zaha Hadid – a dwarf in comparison, at 140,000 square metres. Its design, say the developers, is "themed with a comprehensive and profound oceanic culture and inspired by the design concept of sailing seagulls and undulating waves".




    On entering the echoing 18-storey atrium, lined with a stratified cream cake of hotel balconies and zig-zagging escalators, visitors are blasted with artificial sea breeze, designed to "make one intoxicated, as if he were enjoying himself in the fabulous heaven". Moving past aquarium walls and through a strange hybrid townscape of Polynesian huts crossed with a middle eastern kasbah, tourists arrive at the 400m-long coastline, where the largest artificial waves in the world break in front of the longest LED screen in the world – on which "the alternating morning cloud and twilight afterglow extend the horizon limitlessly in the temporal and spatial directions".


    For one of the most polluted cities in China, the sun shines through the glass barrel-vaulted roof in a remarkably blue sky. "We have borrowed a Japanese technique," guide Liu Xun told the Sydney Morning Herald. "There is an artificial sun that shines 24 hours a day and allows for a comfortable temperature."





    With offices that are both "comfortable and pompous", entertainment facilities that offer "the most exquisite and extravagant audiovisual pleasures", 1,000 deluxe hotel suites that all enjoy a sea view, and one of the largest shopping malls in China, citizens of the New Century Global Centre are given no reason to leave. But nor might they be able to escape their work: "It is a world class modern city of idyllic beauty," trumpets the promotional video, "where recreation has become the core value of modern business concepts and business will become a way of life."




    official infomercial

  • #2
    Re: Chengdu's New Century Global Centre

    Ran this by my Granddaughter. She thought it was creepy. Agreed.

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    • #3
      Re: Chengdu's New Century Global Centre

      Originally posted by don View Post
      Ran this by my Granddaughter. She thought it was creepy. Agreed.
      Atrocious.

      It's incredibly tacky and is more suited to be a Las Vegas casino or taxpayer-subsidized sports arena than a business center.

      For all of the money they must be spending to build this thing, you'd think they could hire a human to narrate the promotional video instead of using a speech synthesizer that badly mispronounces things.

      Let's see where this thing is ten years from now. Something that large is going to have extremely high maintenance requirements to keep it nice and I wonder if enough people will use it generate the revenue necessary to cover maintenance costs. The shopping, recreation, and amusement seems awfully sterile and I wonder if it will be interesting enough for people to continue to patronize it (I seriously doubt it.)

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      • #4
        Re: Chengdu's New Century Global Centre

        Originally posted by don View Post
        Ran this by my Granddaughter. She thought it was creepy. Agreed.

        It makes sense if you been to China. The air is toxic.

        http://money.cnn.com/2013/07/09/news...ion/index.html

        The 1% elites are going to live inside these "biosphere" while the 99% breathe in pollution everyday.

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        • #5
          Re: Chengdu's New Century Global Centre

          Mis-allocated capital? In China? Nah...After all, China is Different. Completely unlike this other place:


          The World or World Islands is an artificial archipelago of various small islands constructed in the rough shape of a world map, located 4.0 kilometres off the coast of Dubai, United Arab Emirates.


          The Palm Jumeirah seen from theInternational Space Station.
          The Palm Islands are an artificial archipelago in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, off the coast in the Persian Gulf.




          Ski Dubai is an indoor ski resort with 22,500 square meters of indoor ski area. It is a part of the Mall of the Emirates, one of the largest shopping malls in the world, located in Dubai, United Arab Emirates


          Burj Khalifa (Arabic: برج خليفة‎, "Khalifa tower"), known as Burj Dubai prior to its inauguration, is a skyscraper in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and is the tallest man-made structure in the world, at 829.8 m (2,722 ft).

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          • #6
            Re: Chengdu's New Century Global Centre

            Wonder how much the air conditioning bill is? Does the place have it's own coal fired power plant? The Arcology has been explored in SF in Niven's and Pournelle's book, "Oath of Fealty."
            "I love a dog, he does nothing for political reasons." --Will Rogers

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