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Shanghai, Oct, 28, (Xinhuanet) -- In a conscious bid to save Shanghai's
"unrecognized" historical buildings, the local government will launch a thorough
investigation, which it hopes will ensure their protection from renovation
projects.
The move will be jointly launched by several departments, including the
Shanghai Urban Planning Administration Bureau and the Shanghai Commission of
Cultural Relics Management, officials said.
So far, the city has 398 "authorized" ancient buildings and 11 areas which
are under municipal protection.
However, an estimate by Tongji University reveals that the city has at
least 10,000 to 20,000 sites of historical interest.
But it has no regulation to protect these unheralded ancient sites, Chen
Youhua, a chief engineer of the Shanghai Urban Planning Administration Bureau,
said.
That means even if some vintage buildings are found in an area under
renovation, they could be forced to make way for modern buildings despite their
historical value.
To tackle the problem, "our bureau will soon organize a group of
specialists to examine how many heritage buildings - including typical Shikumen
lanes, hospitals and storage houses - the city possesses. The mission may well
take many years," Chen said.
Once the historical buildings are recognized, real estate developers, on
whose land they are located, will have to either change or adjust their
development plans, he said.
On October 16, Shanghai Party Secretary Chen Liangyu and Mayor Han Zheng
inspected several key historical areas in downtown, highlighting the importance
of retaining ancient structures in urban planning.
"The old buildings are not only the city's symbolic landscaping attraction
but best represent its history as a combination of Western and Eastern
cultures," Chen said.
While the government is taking measures, a group of teachers and students
from Tongji University are also voluntarily researching old buildings in central
downtown.
Ruan Yisan, a professor of Tongji's architecture and urban planning
department who leads the team, said: "We just want to help the city government
to count how many treasures it has."
Ruan also said it's important for the government to utilize more social
funds in pre-serving historical buildings. "In many foreign countries, it is
individuals, not govern-ments, that take essential responsibility for protecting
historical structures while the latter only provides some preferential tax
policies to support and encourage the protection," he said.
Shanghai's proliferation of old buildings reflects a diversity of past
overseas styles when it was once home to many foreign traders. Enditem
(Shanghai Daily) |