July 1, 2008

Seattle, Meet Beijing as She Primps for the Summer Olympics

china2.JPG Having just returned from a three week trek through China (and with the Beijing Summer Olympics on the horizon), I thought it might be timely to deviate from Seattle real estate for a moment and share some reflections (and vacation pictures!) from my trip with you.

First off, I can wholeheartedly say that you won’t hear me complaining about the weather, traffic, or housing in Seattle anymore (or at least as much). In fact, after getting a first hand view of how the Chinese people live, I would be hard pressed to complain about much of anything again.

Case in point, in this distant land where the culture is so glaringly different than our own, the sprawling metropolis of Beijing struggles each day to handle its population of 15 million inhabitants, which is roughly four times the size of the Seattle metropolitan area. The cityscape is different than what we know, for it is far more dense, far more crowded, and far less personal than our beloved city. The work commute starts very early in the morning, thoughchina1.jpg this is mostly due to the struggle to get through traffic. Businesses open late in the morning, but they also stay open much later, as the coolness of the evening seems to draw more people out for shopping and eating late into the night.

Another noticeable difference–no real suburbs as far as I could tell. Beijing appears to be densely filled with row after row of identical high-rise housing units, each equipped with individual air conditioner and laundry dangling out from each window. As you travel further and further away from the city center, these high rise residences continue on, until suddenly it stops and you find yourself on rural farmland. In fact, the shiny, new Olympic stadium (aka the “Bird’s Nest”), appears to outsiders as a wholey integrated portion of Beijing, but in fact, it actually lies on what was pre-construction farmland. My guide personally knew at least one farmer who received $1 million in exchange for his land.

In Beijing, the hustle and bustle of the Olympics is everywhere you look. The cchina.JPGity is crazed with getting in shape for the ultimate world event. Construction is every direction you turn, with bamboo scaffolding covering everything from massive skyscrapers to historical treasures like the Forbidden City. With the Olympics within spitting distance, it looks precarious if it will all be finished in time, but knowing the unparalleled discipline of the Chinese, I’m certain it will.

In addition, traffic takes on a whole new meaning in cities like Beijing and Shanghai. In a place where the auto industry has been growing in recent years due to the lower of price to encourage car sales, paradoxically, at the same time citizens are discouraged from driving these cars by placing tolls on roads which far exceed the low cost of public transportation. For example, on one route alone, I calculated the toll road costs of driving a private car to be six times more than the required bus fare, and this didn’t even take fuel costs into consideration.

And of course, there’s the weather…never again will I complain about Seattle rain. I was warned beforehand to bring an umbrella, but being the overconfident Seattlite that I am, I thought I was rainproof–after all, who carries an umbrella around here??  However, rainproof I may be, but monsoonproof, I am not! Within seconds, I was crushed by tumultuous sheets of rain. In Beijing, it’s duck and cover, or drown.

On the other hand, rents in Beijing are on the rise, mainly because of the Olympics. Homeowners who were even considering selling earlier on decided to hang onto their properties and rent them out during the Olympics, though the actual sales prices of properties has been on the decline. This decline is expected to continue after the Olympics have come and gone, making Beijing no different than any other major city right now. However, long after the camera’s fade into the distance, one thing is for sure, the 2008 Olympics will have changed Beijing for the better. 

More food for thought:

$466,00 can get you this 2 bedroom, 1,500 square foot apartment in Beijing  or this 3 bedroom, 1,500 square foot house in Bellevue or this  What’s the difference (besides 6,000+ miles)? Per capita income in Beijing is roughly $3,600/year, compared to $29,000/year in Bellevue.


Comments (3)

meks said:

Nice that you went to China… quite the experience huh?

On the Olympic Village note, it sounds like you got the party line. In actuality, about 1.5 million people were forcefully evicted by that project.

see: http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/2007-06-05-3431055449_x.htm

Though it seems most were compensated, it was not adequate in many cases.

That said, all governments get in on a little eminent domain action now and then, China just has more density to deal with so it affects a few more people.

Katrina Munsell said:

Great article! Thanks for posting that… Really difficult to know who got what, if anything at all, as information is not exactly free flowing. Supposedly a first hand report, though in marked contrast, the farmer that found the Terra Cotta Warriors in Xian got absolutely nothing.

Math said:

That $466,000 apartment is located in a really sweet part of downtown Beijing; kinda like Belltown. To compare with Bellevue, I’d look for a place between the 3rd and 4th ring.

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