Massive Mad Master plan developments



Planning a High-Performance,
Sustainable City in China

Wenzhou Lingni Master Plan
Wenzhou, China


Our Wenzhou master plan weaves together natural elements and infrastructure to produce a high performance, sustainable city.

HOK’s competition plan incorporates the potential of the site to create a meaningful urban fabric while protecting sensitive ecosystems along the rapidly developing coastline. A mixed-use strategy integrates dense urban fabric, productive landscape and vibrant communities into catalysts that activate the site.
The master plan accommodates seasonal and climatic adaptations to the coastal river delta environment. This flexibility gives the city resilience to adapt to tidal and technological changes.
By synthesizing market demands into a plan that respects current and future ecosystems, the city will attract investors while promoting a high quality of life. The integration of landscape and urban density creates a model of sustainable development.


Weifang, Shandong





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Chairman Wang Shuifu visited the AVIC TFAI and Yanliang China Aviation Industry Base
Clicked:311times Time:2011-10-13 0:13:07 [Font Size:Big Middle Small]
On Oct.13, 2011, Wang Shuifu - Chairman of Xizi UHC led a team to visit the AVIC The First Aircraft Design Institute and Yan Liang China Aviation Industry Base.
Wang Shuifu, the chairman of Xizi UHC and Li Shouze, the president of AVIC The First Aircraft Design Institute
He Liang - Director of Yan Liang China Aviation Industry Base introduced China Aviation Industry Base to Wang Shuifu and his team from Xizi UHC.







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Ireland to help establish €2bn Chinese equine centre

China has chosen Ireland to help establish a multi-billion euro national equine centre in the country's fourth largest city Tianjin.






The facility is expected to generate almost €40m in exports for Ireland within three years.
The Tianjin Equine Culture City project, costing almost €2bn, will help China to develop a horse racing and breeding industry.
The announcement was made by Minister for Agriculture Simon Coveney, who is in China on a five-day trade mission.
China’s top agriculture graduates will spend two months studying at Coolmore Stud in Tipperary as part of the project.
The project marks the first Chinese government involvement with an overseas joint venture in horse racing and breeding.
Mr Coveney said: "This initiative should facilitate the development of a major export market for horses from Ireland and has the potential to provide a range of business opportunities for companies and individuals in Ireland who can bring a wide range of expertise to the project."
The 127-strong delegation on the trade mission will take part in a series of events focused on trade and investment.
Over 50 Irish food and agri-services companies are taking part in the mission to identify potential market outlets for Irish produce.
Chief executives of leading Irish companies involved in the export of meats, dairy products, seafood and agri-tech products, as well as services to China, will accompany the minister.
The mission follows a trip to China by Taoiseach Enda Kenny last month, during which a strategic partnership for co-operation was established on a range of issues.
Minister Coveney will meet with his Chinese counterpart on Tuesday before all parties attend a trade reception in the Irish Embassy in Beijing.
The Ireland-China Food Network will be launched as part of the global diaspora network later in the week.
It is hoped the mission will secure lucrative contracts from Chinese firms

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China plans £2.6bn horse racing complex

China is to build a £2.6bn international horse racing complex outside the port city of Tianjin in a bid to capitalise on growing interest in the sport which was officially banned for almost 60 years after the Communist takeover in 1949.


An artist's impression of the new horse racing track  

An ambitious 10-year project, backed by developers in Dubai, aims to create a "Tianjin Horse City" with an international equestrian college, horse-breeding centre, auction base, animal feed factory, racetrack, and 7-star hotel with sweeping, phoenix-shaped grandstand.
The Dubai-based Meydan group, the developer of the world's biggest horse racing complex, said it had been invited by the Chinese government to use its know-how to take horse racing in China to the next level.
"Horse racing is a brand-new industry in China," said Teo Ah Khing, the managing director of the Malaysian TAK Design Consultants, which is raising finance for the project, "They have little dots all over the country of horse racing and breeding but no structure." Comparisons are being drawn with Dubai which held its first race in 1992 with virtually no infrastructure in place, but within a decade was hosting the world's richest race, the $10m Dubai World Cup.
China is hoping to emulate that success, having legalised horse racing in 2008, however sources at the China Equestrian Association cautioned that the country was still woefully short of the experience and expertise required to run such a project.
Previous attempts to kick-start racing in China ran into difficulties, with the government shutting down a number of racecourse in 2000 in an anti-gambling campaign. In 2005 nearly 600 horses belonging to a failed Beijing racecourse were put down, to the fury of animal rights campaigners.
Racing was introduced in China by the British in the 19th and early 20th century, with the sport becoming a popular pastime. By the 1930s Shanghai boasted one of the largest racetracks in the world, the outline of which can still be seen in one of the city's parks.
However the sport was banned after the Communist revolution as a colonial and backward pursuit, but after a false start in the 1990s was legalised in 2008 when the former colonial "concession" of Wuhan in central China won the first licenses to stage races.
In a separate development, the owners of Wuhan's racing operations, Orient Lucky Horse Corporation, announced it was intending it was pushing ahead with its own three-year plan for a horse city, with luxury hotels in a bid to attract more tourists to the city.
Wuhan last year sent a delegation to Kentucky in the United States as part of its drive to create an international-standard horse racing industry in China, and Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan Province is developing a track in close co-operation with the Australian government.
Work on the Tianjin Horse City is slated to begin next month, with plans to complete the 660-acre equestrian college, stud farm and animal feed factory by the end of 2011, with the first 1,000 students scheduled to be enrolled the following year.
A stud farm breeding 1,000 horses a year, drawing on international bloodstock and an auction centre selling 700 horses a year are due for completion by the end of 2012. A luxury 3,600 bed hotel and accommodation for 20,000 workers is also planned.
The success of the project may well hinge on whether China's government moves to put racing on a commercial footing by legalising gambling which is currently limited to a lottery-style system where punters win scratch-lottery tickets for picking the winning horse.
But despite persistent lobbying in recent years from local governments to relax the rules, China's central government has refused to break a taboo on gambling which is a favourite pastime of the Chinese, with an estimated £50bn flowing out of China on illegal gambling every year.
The Chinese racing industry has argued that legalising on-track betting could generate up to three million jobs, clean up illegal gambling and generate some £4bn in tax revenues.
However a report by the Kentucky China Trade Centre last year played down the immediate prospects for expanding the sport in China.
"We cannot see a bright future for commercial horse racing, horse racing gambling and racetracks in mainland China in terms of the central government's attitude towards the issue and the circumstances of laws prohibiting it," it said.

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