
Ordos in Inner Mongolia is one of the  wealthiest regions in China, mainly due to vast reserves of coal and  natural gas. In it’s obsessive pursuit of GDP, the new Kangbashi  district in Ordos was planned and built by PRC with an eye on the future  development with massive investments on building and infrastructure.  There’s only one small problem. This city built at a breakneck speed in  just five years, intended for a million residents, and filled with all  the amenities that signal a prosperous and modern boom town, has only  one thing missing in it – people.


Kangbashi is known as a modern ghost  town. Kangbashi was designed to have more than 1 million people but  remains absolutely empty after the project was launched in 2004. In six  years, the authority has spent about $2,6 billion to transform the area  into a postmodern metropolis with government towers, skyscrapers,  museums, libraries, theaters, sculpture squares and luxury dwellings.  Despite the fact that almost all of the infrastructure is finished, the  lack of schools, hospitals, taxis, high-speed internet, cable TV and  entertainment facilities discouraged people to join Kangbashi. If you go  there now, you’ll have more chances to meet street cleaners than  pedestrians there.



Kangbashi is a  architectural marvels  and sculpture gardens. The city, built by the government and funded with  coal money, its chief industries energy and carmaking, has been mostly  vacant for as long as it has been complete, except for the massive  municipal headquarters. It’s a grand canyon of empty monoliths. In a  paradox only possible in today’s economic system, Kangbashi manages to  be both a boom town and a ghost town at the same time.





 
 
 
 
