Rapid development over the last four decades of
breakneck economic growth has seen many old buildings demolished and
cookie-cutter skyscrapers and other edifices put up in their place.
While some places like Shanghai and Tianjin have
done a relatively good job at protecting their cultural heritage, such
as the colonial-era architecture of the two cities, others have lost
swathes of historic buildings.
The new policy to better protect traditional
Chinese culture, released by the central government, states cities have
to set more store on their “historic and cultural value”.
“Refine and carefully choose prominent examples
of special cultural characteristics and symbols, put this into
urbanisation and city planning, rationally use public spaces for
sculptures, squares and parts,” it said.
“Avoid a thousand pieces of the same tune, a thousand cities with the same face.”
In many parts of China the destruction of old
buildings predates the country’s economic reforms of the late 1970s and
can be dated back to the early days of Communist rule ushered in by the
1949 revolution.
Large parts of old Beijing, including the city
walls, were demolished to make way for what is now Tiananmen Square and
the cavernous Great Hall of the People, home to China’s largely
rubber-stamp parliament.
he document said that the Communist Party has a “historical responsibility” to protect and promote traditional Chinese culture.
The guidelines also state the need to protect
traditional Chinese villages and supporting poetry, music, dance,
calligraphy and painting.
Brief mention is made too of protecting
dialects, which have fallen out of favour with the government’s push to
get everyone speaking one national language, Mandarin.
Source: South China Morning Post
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