NationStates Jolt Archive


China has gone Mall crazy...

The Goa uld
26-05-2005, 00:16
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/25/business.../25mall.html?hp

DONGGUAN, China - After construction workers finish plastering a replica of the Arc de Triomphe and buffing the imitation streets of Hollywood, Paris and Amsterdam, a giant new shopping theme park here will proclaim itself the world's largest shopping mall.

The South China Mall - a jumble of Disneyland and Las Vegas, a shoppers' version of paradise and hell all wrapped in one - will be nearly three times the size of the massive Mall of America in Minnesota. It is part of yet another astonishing new consequence of the quarter-century economic boom here: the great malls of China.

Not long ago, shopping in China consisted mostly of lining up to entreat surly clerks to accept cash in exchange for ugly merchandise that did not fit. But now, Chinese have started to embrace America's modern "shop till you drop" ethos and are in the midst of a buy-at-the-mall frenzy.

Already, four shopping malls in China are larger than the Mall of America. Two, including the South China Mall, are bigger than the West Edmonton Mall in Alberta, which just surrendered its status as the world's largest to an enormous retail center in Beijing. And by 2010, China is expected to be home to at least 7 of the world's 10 largest malls.

Chinese are swarming into malls, which usually have many levels that rise up rather than out in the sprawling two-level style typical in much of the United States. Chinese consumers arrive by bus and train, and growing numbers are driving there. On busy days, one mall in the southern city of Guangzhou attracts about 600,000 shoppers.


....

For the moment, the world's biggest mall is the six-million-square-foot Golden Resources Mall, which opened last October in northwestern Beijing. It has already sparked envy and competitive ambition among the world's big mall builders, who outwardly scoff at the Chinese ascent to mall-dom, even as they plot their own path to build on such scale in China.

How big is six million square feet? That mall, which is expected to cost $1.3 billion when completed, spans the length of six football fields and easily exceeds the floor space of the Pentagon, which at 3.7 million square feet is the world's largest office building. It is a single, colossal five-story building - with rows and rows of shops stacked on top of more rows and rows of shops - so large that it is hard to navigate among the 1,000 stores and the thousands of shoppers.

...

But just to keep a seven-million-square-foot shopping center from looking deserted, some retailing specialists say, requires 50,000 to 70,000 visitors a day.


Officials of the South China Mall say they will easily surpass those figures.

(It seems the Chinese government has forgotten about the poverty ridden countryside.)
Sino
26-05-2005, 00:19
It doesn't surprise me. With such a large population, of course the malls will have to be HUGE. The shortage of free space in commercial places have resulted in the sometimes annoying allocation of table sharing in restaurants.
Sino
26-05-2005, 00:25
(It seems the Chinese government has forgotten about the poverty ridden countryside.)

(Is that an anti-capitalist statement?)

Traditionally, the countryside has always been less prosperous than the cities. This is what makes the distinction between urban and rural. The conditions across the country side have been improving and will continue to improve.
The Goa uld
26-05-2005, 00:32
(Is that an anti-capitalist statement?)

Traditionally, the countryside has always been less prosperous than the cities. This is what makes the distinction between urban and rural. The conditions across the country side have been improving and will continue to improve.
I'm as capitalist as you can get, but the conditions on the countryside are horrid. Just expressing concern.
Californian Refugees
26-05-2005, 00:37
I live in the Chinese countryside. I'm not sure how big cities having or lacking a mall would make a difference in conditions here.
Swimmingpool
26-05-2005, 01:12
Wow... just wow. That's shocking.
Sino
26-05-2005, 04:00
I live in the Chinese countryside. I'm not sure how big cities having or lacking a mall would make a difference in conditions here.

It'll create more employment opportunities, pulling the bumpkins away from their homes. LOL!

Seriously, vast tracts of the Canton province's countryside have been on a slow path of urbanization in recent years. That could mean that it may happen to your county too. Instead of the old Maoist guerilla warfare idea of outskirts surrounding the cities, this is more like the cities devouring the countryside. There has been endless expansions of city boundaries.