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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A rabbit sculpture is carried away from the Ditan temple fair after a snowfall in Beijing.
"If you want to be rich, you must first build roads," says a Chinese proverb.

The Chinese firmly believe that massive investment in infrastructure will help it keep pace with the developed nations.

So China spends about 40-50 per cent of its GDP on infrastructure -- roads, bridges, trains, ports, technology, factories and office buildings in a bid to establish itself as a global economic superpower.

The world's fastest-growing economy has seen average growth rates of 10 per cent for the past three decades.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Traffic flows on a flyover at the Bund in Shanghai.
China is planning to spend $950 billion on roads, bridges and ports from 2011 to 2015. An express rail line will be built to connect Hong Kong.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A man walks in Lujiazui, a financial district in Pudong, Shanghai.
China's investment on transportation infrastructure stood at $11.8 billion in 2010. However, China's roads and railways have not expanded meet the growing needs of a rising population.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Vehicles drive during the evening rush hour in central Shanghai.
Over the next five years, China will invest heavily in expanding urban infrastructure to meet the growing demands of the people. An ambitious plan to merge nine cities around the Pearl River Delta is also being worked out.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Vehicles past along a special Olympic lane at an airport expressway in Beijing.
China has the second longest expressway network in the world after the United States. The 'National Trunk Highway System' has expanded the network to cover more than 74,000 km by the end of 2010.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A bullet train pulls in at a railway station in Shanghai.
China has the world's second largest rail network with a total track length of 91,000 km. Last year, 5,000 km of track were added, 40 per cent of which is electrified.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A bullet train departs from the under-construction Beijing South Railway Station.
According to the Asian major's 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015), the high-speed railway network will stretch to 45,000 km. China's high-speed railway extended to 649 km in 2008. In three years, it has increased to 8,400 km.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Workers clean the exterior of a CRH 380A bullet train.
In October 2010, China unveiled the world's fastest bullet train. The CRH380 bullet train, made in China connects Shanghai and Hangzhou. It travels 200 kilometres in just 45 minutes.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Shanghai's maglev train arrives at Long Yang station.
China has the world's first commercial high-speed maglev (magnetic levitation) train service). Built in collaboration with Germany, the 38-km long route between downtown Shanghai and the Pudong airport opened in 2003. The project cost $1.2 billion.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Shanghai's maglev train.
By 2014, China will have about 19,000 km of high-speed railway, ten times more than Japan's high-speed rail network.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Air China plane waits on tarmac as a China Southern Airbus plane lands at Beijing Airport.
China is planning to build 97 new airports in 12 years, including a second international airport in Beijing. By 2020, China is likely to have 244 airports.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A man rides his motorcycle past shipping containers at the Port of Shanghai.
China has more than 2,000 ports. China has sixteen major shipping ports with a capacity of over 50 million tons per year.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A woman pulls a toy ride carrying her grandson in a residential area for migrant workers.
As per the 12th Five-Year Plan, the Chinese government will focus on infrastructure development in on rural areas to bridge the divide between the urban and rural areas.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A driver walks in front of trains after testing a train at a metro station in Shenyang.
Currently, there are 12 rapid transit systems in mainland China. Sixteen new systems are under construction and 18 more metros are planned. China will have 170 new mass-transit systems by 2025.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A China Eastern Airlines plane sits on the tarmac as an Air China plane takes off at Beijing Airport
China will become the world's second largest airliner market by 2030. It would need 4,330 new commercial airplanes valued at $480 billion in the next twenty years.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Vehicles are seen in a traffic jam during weekday rush hour in Beijing.
China is now the world's largest automobile producer and consumer. In 2010, China beat the US as the world's largest auto market.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
People make their way on a street amid snowfall in Yantai, Shandong province.
China has also surpassed Japan as the world's top automaker and Germany as the world's largest auto exporter.

China will account for the largest number of vehicles sold in any country in 2011 and 2012.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Workers on a boat collect trash from a polluted waterway in Beijing.
China has 110,000 kilometres of navigable rivers, streams, lakes, and canals. China has a number of amazing bridges.

The world's longest trans-oceanic bridge extends across the Hangzhou Bay to over 35.673 kilometres (22 miles). It has six expressway lanes in two directions.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
A woman walks between buildings at Sanlitun SOHO residential and commercial complex in Beijing.
Five million new buildings will come up in China by 2025, out of which 50,000 will be skyscrapers.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Buildings of the luxury residential and commercial complex Yintai Centre.
China could build a city as big as 'Chicago' every year until 2030. The country already has more than 1,500 new 30-storeyed buildings.

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20 interesting facts on China's infrastructure

Last updated on: June 2, 2011 14:21 IST
Migrant labourers work at a construction site in downtown Shanghai.
Six of the 15 tallest completed buildings in the world are in China.