Diagnosing Beijing 2020: Mapping the Ungovernable City

Authors

  • Robin Visser

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7480/footprint.2.1.674

Abstract

Beijing Municipality, characterised by the ‘off-ground’ architecture distinguishing neo-liberal privatisation, is attempting to mitigate the damaging effects of rampant development on the social fabric, cultural heritage, and the environment by adopting sustainable urban planning. I argue that the sustainability rhetoric in the Beijing Municipality 2020 Plans functions in part as strategic metaphors masking unnamed, imminent threats to governance. In this article I diagnose four Beijing plans (Beijing 2006-2015 ‘Rail Transit Plan’ for Compact City, Beijing 2005-2020 ‘Underground Space Plan’ for Alternative Space, Beijing 2006-2020 ‘Undeveloped Area Plan’ for Ecological Responsibility, and Beijing 2006-2010 ‘Low-income Housing Plan’ for Affordability and Liveability). A diagrammatics of the plans illuminates not so much a mapping of Beijing’s future as the forms of spontaneity preoccupying the nation at this historical juncture. The Beijing 2020 plan, as city mapping more generally, discloses the imminence of ungovernable city. The fact that citizens are demanding greater authority over Beijing governance suggests that radical alterations to its urban fabric and quality of life have incited the imminent sociability that is the city.

Author Biography

Robin Visser

Robin Visser, Assistant Professor in the Department of Asian Studies, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, teaches courses in modern Chinese literature, film, and urban studies. She has book chapters in English and Chinese. Her forthcoming book explores how the postsocialist transformation of Chinese cities shapes the cultural imagination as manifest in urban design, architecture, literature, film and art.

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Published

2008-01-01