Many Shanghai neighborhoods will become construction battle
zones over the next five years as the city builds 260 new Metro
stations, a senior official said yesterday.
Small streets will be blocked, lanes will be restricted on major
roads and noise and dust will fly in the affected areas — although
officials promised to keep the negative effects to a minimum.
The city's basic message to residents: Please bear with us; the
inconveniences of the near term will lead to smoother transport for
commuters in the medium term.
The scope and speed of Shanghai's mass transit plans are highly
ambitious.
The length of the Metro system will nearly quadruple by 2010. It
took London and New York more than 100 years to build networks of
the same length. Shanghai plans to do it in less than 20.
"The overall traffic situation over the next five years will be
worse than in the past five years," Bian Baiping, director of the
Shanghai Urban Transport Bureau, told Shanghai Daily
during the ongoing session of the Shanghai People's Congress.
More than 100 new subway stations are already under
construction, and the rest will break ground during the period,
which means building will take place on many of the facilities at
the same time.
Most of the new Metro stations will be built within the Outer
Ring Road. By the time the project is finished, Shanghai's present
five Metro lines will be expanded to more than 11, and the total
length of the system will grow from 123 kilometers to 400.
Bian said the government is well aware of the huge challenge
brought by the rapid urban construction campaign. He said the
subway project will inevitably cause traffic congestion and
inconvenience to citizens.
"But only after the Metro network is fully established can the
city's traffic congestion be effectively reduced," he said.
To minimize disruptions, the city said it will increase control
over construction sites to minimize the area affected and reduce
dirt and nighttime noise.
Many of the 100-plus sites that are now under construction are
close to existing residential complexes — and drawing
complaints.
"Many trees have been transplanted in front of our complex, and
I'm worried about the noise and dirt from construction," said Zhang
Yi, a school teacher who lives in a Putuo District residential
complex near a subway construction site.
(Shanghai Daily January 18, 2006)