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Pictures of developed villages and towns in China

According to Wikipedia, 60.06% of the total Chinese population lives in urban areas. That means over 500m people still live in rural areas. In a country as big as China, I would assume the rural landscape varies considerably from region to region.
 
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According to Wikipedia, 60.06% of the total Chinese population lives in urban areas. That means over 500m people still live in rural areas. In a country as big as China, I would assume the rural landscape varies considerably from region to region.
Yes, that's right, China is a large area with different geographical environments. The degree of economic development is different. Therefore, the gap in rural China is also large. However, in the past few years, the Chinese government has been earnestly helping the poor and planning and constructing new rural areas. In the future, China's rural areas will become better and better.
----------------------------------------China's more developed villages
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China still has a huge gap of development between its cities and villages. Hopefully living standards in small towns and villages will also experience modernization and improvement.
My own experience is different .While a village may not boast 5 star hotels, bars, expensive salons, malls and resorts it does have:
- Excellent schools
- Hospitals , both Western and traditional,
- Police Stations with a fleet of modern police cars.
- Technical Schools
- Modern Food stores with both frozen and fresh vegetables, fish and meat.
- Clean hygienic eating houses, tea rooms, noodle and soup houses.
- Hardware stores with facilities for rental tools.
- Farmers markets for produce and livestock.
-Vehicle dealerships ( small ones) for service and maintenance of farm equipment.
-Bus and where applicable rail stations.
- Public restrooms . lots of them.
- Water tower
- Power station or distribution substation/
-Feeder road to the nearest expressway.
- Where applicable a small trolley or train station.
- A single fueling station selling gasoline/petrol, paraffin, and diesel oil.
- Gas "bullet" . Or underground gas tank storing LPG for cooking and heating and a vending station selling LPG cylinders.
- There are lots of e-bikes and small neighborhood electric vehicles.

There used to be bathhouses and neighborhood rest room facilities but these have mostly vanished since China underwent a massive housing reform project and moved to a nuclear family system living in modern single family homes. Usually these are town homes.
 
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--------------------------------------------Relatively backward villages in the west
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----------------------------------Western Guizhou Mountain Village
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-------------------------------------------------Continue to publish pictures of Shishan Town, Nanhai District, Foshan City, Guangdong Province, China
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----------------------------Pictures of Chang'an Town, Dongguan City, Guangdong Province, China
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--------------------------------Picture of Humen Town, Dongguan City, Guangdong Province, China
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-------------------------------------------Pictures of Houjie Town, Dongguan City, Guangdong Province, China
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---------------------------------------------Picture of Changping Town, Dongguan City, Guangdong Province, China
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Village? Dongguan is 1/10th of Guangdong GDP...
 
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Have visited both over time.
There used to be a two wheeler taxi service but that has long since been replaced by four wheel extremely comfortable air conditioned EV taxis.

You lived in China before? Where and for how long?
 
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You lived in China before? Where and for how long?
Without sharing personal information all I can say is that my work over 5 years made me travel over most of China mainly in Shanxi, Shandong, Xinjiang provinces and of course the main cities of Shenzhen Beijing and Guangzhou, as well as Hong Kong. Two cities I didn't visit was Shanghai and Wuhan.
What impressed me was not the cities so much , but the rural development in China and over the years I was there I watched the rapid transformation of the move from small walk-behind farm machines to bigger tractors, and then on to the really big farm equipment. I also watched the transformation of the common Chinese people in mobility from mopeds, light motorcycles, scooters to small cars, then larger SUVs.
But my information is out dated:
As for time line: All I can tell you is that I was there for the Beijing Olympics.
Shortly afterwards an accident and disability, terminated my work in China, but I stayed in touch with my friends and colleagues over there and my replacement who
continues to travel exchanging information.
So I am out of date but I do miss going back to China. Someday if by a miracle my mobility is restored I plan to go and travel on the Qing Hai Tibet railway. My life's ambition!
 
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THe other day I was looking at google earth on shanghai adjoining regions. What surprised me is the amount of canals and greenhouses in china rural areas. Almost every house seemed to have a canal going through its backyard.
 
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THe other day I was looking at google earth on shanghai adjoining regions. What surprised me is the amount of canals and greenhouses in china rural areas. Almost every house seemed to have a canal going through its backyard.

The region around Shanghai is called Jiangnan and are full of canal towns. Many of them like Suzhou, earned the nickname Venice of the East.

 
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What I am saying is, villages should remain and exist. Modernized and developed YES. But still a village. There is a reason why US is preferring suburb.
Suburban sprawl is also bad. Getting essentials services(fire, ambulance, police etc) to people becomes a challenge. Not to mention the traffic/transport.
 
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The above posted pictures are not villages by any definition. Towns maybe. I hope next you will keep updating this thread by posting pictures of villages too (as the thread title says) . I think villages should not have 3+ floor buildings and adequately spaced.
China cities look similar to some cities in the US. Concrete depression. Like Los Angeles, Philadelphia. You drive in, then you drive out.
 
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The above posted pictures are not villages by any definition. Towns maybe. I hope next you will keep updating this thread by posting pictures of villages too (as the thread title says) . I think villages should not have 3+ floor buildings and adequately spaced.
Bro, there are many village drone views in my thread here:
I sent pictures of China's top 1000 towns
You can open the link if you understand Chinese
https://www.sohu.com/a/258332907_642249
1,000 towns, Bro, That is a lot of work!
 
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