The city of Ordos, in Inner Mongolia, China, was founded on February 26, 2001. It was designed to be home for one million people, yet, the Kangbashi district remains nearly empty five years after construction began.
Ordos means "palaces" in Mongolian, and it's richer than Beijing. In fact, with a $14,500 GDP per capita, it's one of the richest in the whole country. With 1,548,000 inhabitants, Ordos is not exactly empty. But much of its modern architecture, sometimes awesomely futuristic, sometimes nafftastically overdeveloped and underdesigned, remains completely empty. The density of this city is only 17.8 people per square kilometer. By comparison, New York City has 157.91 habitants per square kilometer, San Francisco has 6,688.4, and Madrid 5,293.69.
The Kangbashi district began as a public-works project in Ordos, a wealthy coal-mining town in Inner Mongolia. The area is filled with office towers, administrative centers, government buildings, museums, theaters and sports fields—not to mention acre on acre of subdivisions overflowing with middle-class duplexes and bungalows. The only problem: the district was originally designed to house, support and entertain 1 million people, yet hardly anyone lives there.
Though many of the properties in Kangbashi have been sold and a million people were projected to be living in Kangbashi by 2010, the city is still empty.
Mostly empty apartment buildings in Kangbashi, a half hour down the road is Dongsheng, where most of Ordos' 1.5 million resident call home.
A pair of workers tidy up outside the public library. The city boasts the second highest per-capita income, behind to Shanghai but ahead of Beijing.
Workers carry pieces of foam up the stairs of the Ordos Museum, which is still under construction.
A pedestrian walks behind a giant sculpture of two horses in Kangbashi's Linyinlu Square.
Mostly empty apartment buildings stand in the distance.
A pedestrian walks past a mostly unoccupied commercial area. Almost no businesses have moved into the new district.
Empty streets remain empty even during the morning commute.
Construction projects in Kangbashi continue despite the lack of occupancy.
An old man pushes a cart across a road segregating finished apartments and apartments still under construction.
Workers construct a plaza for un-present residents of an apartment complex.
Kangbashi awaits residents to bring the district, meant for a population the size of San Diego, California, to life.
[via Time]
Ordos means "palaces" in Mongolian, and it's richer than Beijing. In fact, with a $14,500 GDP per capita, it's one of the richest in the whole country. With 1,548,000 inhabitants, Ordos is not exactly empty. But much of its modern architecture, sometimes awesomely futuristic, sometimes nafftastically overdeveloped and underdesigned, remains completely empty. The density of this city is only 17.8 people per square kilometer. By comparison, New York City has 157.91 habitants per square kilometer, San Francisco has 6,688.4, and Madrid 5,293.69.
The Kangbashi district began as a public-works project in Ordos, a wealthy coal-mining town in Inner Mongolia. The area is filled with office towers, administrative centers, government buildings, museums, theaters and sports fields—not to mention acre on acre of subdivisions overflowing with middle-class duplexes and bungalows. The only problem: the district was originally designed to house, support and entertain 1 million people, yet hardly anyone lives there.
Though many of the properties in Kangbashi have been sold and a million people were projected to be living in Kangbashi by 2010, the city is still empty.
Mostly empty apartment buildings in Kangbashi, a half hour down the road is Dongsheng, where most of Ordos' 1.5 million resident call home.
A pair of workers tidy up outside the public library. The city boasts the second highest per-capita income, behind to Shanghai but ahead of Beijing.
Workers carry pieces of foam up the stairs of the Ordos Museum, which is still under construction.
A pedestrian walks behind a giant sculpture of two horses in Kangbashi's Linyinlu Square.
Mostly empty apartment buildings stand in the distance.
A pedestrian walks past a mostly unoccupied commercial area. Almost no businesses have moved into the new district.
Empty streets remain empty even during the morning commute.
Construction projects in Kangbashi continue despite the lack of occupancy.
An old man pushes a cart across a road segregating finished apartments and apartments still under construction.
Workers construct a plaza for un-present residents of an apartment complex.
Kangbashi awaits residents to bring the district, meant for a population the size of San Diego, California, to life.
[via Time]