Lauren Quinn has an interesting article in The Guardian about Hanoi's approach to unlicensed, unplanned construction. Here's an excerpt:
enjosmith/Flickr
As the 1990s progressed, increased wealth fuelled demand, and illegal construction grew sharply. In 1995, there were about 1,000 illegal projects in the city—and those were just the reported cases. The city also began to spread out, progressively consuming villages and rice paddies to keep pace with demand for homes. Urban planners call this "spontaneous urban development." Most of the world calls it "slums." But in Hanoi, with the unusual mixture of basic regulation and control, a strange thing happened. "The negative side of this development was substandard infrastructure," says DiGregorio, "but there was also a positive." That positive came from the enlightened regulatory attitude of authorities.
In the culture of semi-legal construction, if someone built a structure that adhered to minimum standards, it became legal—and for the most part was provided with basic services such as electricity and sanitation. In most developing cities, those flooding from the countryside end up living in sprawling squatter encampments, lacking basic sanitation and vulnerable to eviction. But in Hanoi, the new arrivals could build houses that didn't have official permission but often received basic services anyway.
Read the rest here. For more from Reason on unlicensed building in the Third World, go here.
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Well, their legal basis starts from "Everything belongs to the state to begin with... the land, the houses, etc." So there's less of a concern that they probably didn't compensate the farmer for the rice paddies they built over.
Oh wait, that's "Property rights" not "zoning" which is a "FYTW" subcategory.
Enlightened might be a strong a word. But it's a sad day when nominally communist commissars are displaying more restraint than municpal governments in the west.
Urban planners call this "spontaneous urban development."
Oh, horror.
Only Vietnam could go to Nixon.
Somewhere in Lowell a very angry short English teacher is tearfully muttering swears.
To be fair, a lot of people in Lowell tearfully mutter swears on a daily basis. Just from the realization that they live in Lowell.
So, in other words, Vietnamese Communists are smarter about "zoning" than the vast majority of the jurisdictions in the US...
Well, their legal basis starts from "Everything belongs to the state to begin with... the land, the houses, etc." So there's less of a concern that they probably didn't compensate the farmer for the rice paddies they built over.
Oh wait, that's "Property rights" not "zoning" which is a "FYTW" subcategory.
Soon, Vietnam will become the ultra-capitalist enclave predicted in Americathon, which is proving right about everything else.
""""But in Hanoi, the new arrivals could build houses that didn't have official permission but often received basic services anyway"""
I am betting they don't receive the services if they don't kick in a bribe to the communist in charge or piss off the local communist bureaucrat
In those cases, they are recorded as not having met the "basic standards"
In fairness we have our own versions of those things in America; we just use different names for them.
Ah, you have experience getting a building permit in Chicago then?!
Charlie don't zone!
I love the smell of freedom in the morning.
*applause*
Welcome to bizarro world, where Hanoi is teaching (limited) lessons in freedom.
Facadism. A word I learned today.
http://www.theguardian.com/art.....-buildings
Enlightened might be a strong a word. But it's a sad day when nominally communist commissars are displaying more restraint than municpal governments in the west.