CN China Blows Up 15 High-Rises Because Constructors Ran Out of Money to Finish Them

China Blows Up 15 High-Rises Because Constructors Ran Out of Money to Finish Them

A group of high-rise buildings have been sitting unfinished in a Chinese city for seven years. And it took 45 seconds to tear them down.
Stunning footage from the demolition last month showed 14 buildings in the southwestern city of Kunming collapse in controlled demolition. The blast failed to destroy a 15th high-rise, which was torn down three days later, local media reported.

These partially-built buildings were a side effect of China’s aggressive urban development model that created what critics called “ghost cities” in parts of the country. Local governments had sold land and embarked on massive infrastructure projects to boost economic growth, while developers often took on heavy debt to bet on ever-rising housing prices.
Some of the vacant neighborhoods filled up later on, but in some cases, the newly-built, dazzling urban spaces struggled to find occupants or even funding to finish construction projects.

Construction of the Kunming complex, named Sunshine City II, began in 2011. The developer soon ran out of money and was acquired by a new company. Work on the residential project stopped in 2013.
The high-rises had been sitting idle since then. In November 2020, another company acquired the housing project’s developer along with its $3.6 million debt. Citing quality defects of the unfinished buildings, the developer applied to have them demolished to make space for new, lower-rise apartment buildings.
The demolition on August 27 required 4.6 metric tons of explosives, installed at some 85,000 detonation points on the buildings, Kunming Daily reported. More than 5,300 residents had to be evacuated for the work, and each household received about $23 in compensation, the report said.

Many local residents, including children, turned up to watch the explosion on the day, according to a livestream of the event by Chuncheng Evening News. “This is the most exciting moment,” a woman in the crowd told the reporter. “I have never seen buildings blown up before.”
“What a pity,” another onlooker said. “It cost a lot of money to build those, and now they are being torn down.”
https://www.vice.com/en/article/xgx93z/china-guan-yu-statue-jingzhou
Following the blast, the entire neighborhood was shrouded in dust, the livestream showed. Water was later sprayed into the sky to soak up the dust.
Sunshine City was one of many projects that had been abandoned for years. In Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, authorities counted 93 unfinished property projects, an official said in April, adding the government aimed to bring them back to life by next year. They could be demolished or taken over by new developers.
Yang Yang, an assistant professor of real estate at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said Chinese developers tended to sell apartments years before construction finished, and use the pre-sale revenues to fund the construction.
But when demand drops due to population outflow, slowing economic growth, and land oversupply, developers facing a cash crunch could be forced into abandoning their projects, she said.

Yang expects fewer unfinished buildings in the future as the government puts more restrictions on how much developers could borrow, although disputes caused by past projects could take a long time to resolve.
Buyers of unfinished projects have staged protests after seeing their life’s savings going up in smoke. Members of the Chinese middle class often take on heavy debts themselves to buy these apartments, believing the real estate market to be the safest investment.
Some buyers were forced to move into these unfinished buildings, as they continued to pay mortgages, according to Chinese media reports.

At another unfinished residential complex in Kunming, with a Chinese name that stands for “town of another way of happiness,” some homeowners had been living without water and electricity. They used solar power and candles, and one man climbed the stairs to his 18th-floor apartment every day.
In August last year, five years after the buildings were abandoned, a new developer took over the construction. For the time being, residents are housed in a dormitory.
 
In November 2020, another company acquired the housing project’s developer along with its $3.6 million debt. Citing quality defects of the unfinished buildings, the developer applied to have them demolished to make space for new, lower-rise apartment buildings.
To those who just read the headline, the original constructors ran out of money. The new guys in charge are tearing it down to build something else.
 
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Makes you wonder why they sent 4 of their "latest and greatest" battleships straight into US-controlled waters at the Aleutian Islands. The same islands that Imperial Japan tried (and failed) capturing in WW2


Bread, Circuses, and Bluffs... politician's best friends!
 
How can they have so many people... and yet so many ghost cities?
The same reason Spain has ghost cities: people stopped breeding. The fertility rate of China is 1.69, and keep in mind that Chinese zoomers (and to a lesser extent millenials) heavily skew male and will never form a family of their own.
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Stunning footage from the demolition last month showed 14 buildings in the southwestern city of Kunming collapse in controlled demolition. The blast failed to destroy a 15th high-rise, which was torn down three days later

The most Chinese of article headers: It was stunning! (It also failed, but kinda worked.... eventually)
 
They set all the explosives and did all the structural work to make it work, did the demolition and cleanup in 45 seconds? Wow. They must have used a lot of people to do that.
 
How can they have so many people... and yet so many ghost cities?
Because of how incredibly fucked up their economic state is right now.

Capital controls make it exceedingly difficult if not impossible to invest your money outside of China. Investing in companies inside of China is a fools bet, when the government has a regular reputation of swinging its dick and destroying everything, stealing it for themselves, or otherwise fucking up a good thing for everyone. Even if they avoid all that, corruption will eat away any possible profits.

That really only leaves real estate as a good investment, and this suites the government just fine (until recently) because they fund significant portions of their local governments off selling land to developers - And the developers are flush with cash from an insanely overheated real estate market. People will buy space, sight unseen, in ghost city developments because hey, real estate always goes up right? Its also worth keeping in mind that having property in a proper city is a big deal - Rural workers have restricted access to social services and healthcare (effectively no access in practice, as far as I know) and only gain access by being a registered household in the city proper. Hoping that these ghost cities breathe life one day is another attempt to escape that for you or your children.

Now some of these big firms are starting to collapse because none of this is sustainable, and its a grade A disaster. China's staring down the barrel of a 2008 on steroids. Blowing up some half finished chinesium towers is gonna be the least of their worries.
 
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