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Could large‐scale urban development and an erosion of rights to public space prove the death knoll for China’s vibrant street life? Shi Jian, Planning Director of ISreading Culture in Beijing, looks at the tradition of Chinese street culture and how it is currently shifting and reinventing itself for new urban contexts. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Could large‐scale urban development and an erosion of rights to public space prove the death knoll for China’s vibrant street life? Shi Jian, Planning Director of ISreading Culture in Beijing, looks at the tradition of Chinese street culture and how it is currently shifting and reinventing itself for new urban contexts. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Street Life and the ‘People’s City’
Jian, Shi (author)
Architectural Design ; 78 ; 48-51
2008-09-01
4 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Di Wang , SongZhuang and Caochangdi , ‘street culture’ , No 50 Moganshan Road in Shanghai , ‘People’ are forced to become helpless consumers within closed micro‐cities , 798 Space in Beijing’s Dashanzi Art District , Street Culture , China’s ‘desire for development’ , October 1949 , Tiananmen Square (the world’s largest single public space) , ‘People’s City’ , China’s total population has more than doubled , People’s Republic of China
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