INSIDE
|
REAL
ESTATE
Rooftop
Villas
Are
Legal,
China
Officials
say
(China
Daily)
Four
unfurnished
villas
that
sit
on
top
of a
shopping
mall
in
Zhuzhou,
Hunan
province,
have
led
to
questions
about
their
safety,
but
city
planners
said
on
Wednesday
the
structures
were
built
legally
and
with
the
required
documentation.

The
buildings,
which
have
electricity
and
water
pipes
already
installed,
will
be
offices
for
the
shopping
mall
developer's
160
real
estate
management
employees,
said
Li
Li
from
the
Zhuzhou
city
planning
bureau.
The
bureau
conducted
an
on-site
investigation
after
media
reports
voiced
concern
over
alleged
safety
hazards
and
the
legal
status
of
the
four
buildings.
Four
houses
were
built
on
the
rooftop
of
the
Jiutian
International
Square,
a
shopping
mall
in
Zhuzhou,
Hunan
province.
Provided
to
China
Daily
The
developer,
Zhuzhou
Jiutian
Real
Estate,
used
modern
designs
and
landscape
decorations
to
make
the
buildings
look
like
villas,
but
never
intended
to
sell
them,
Li
said.
The
construction
of
the
shopping
mall
—
including
the
rooftop
buildings
in
the
mall’s
four
corners
—
obtained
authorities'
approval,
he
said.
The
Zhuzhou
government
has
made
steady
investments
to
build
a
green
city
after
it
was
named
one
of
34
national-level
garden
cities
in
2008.
Other
cities
are
making
similar
efforts.
Beijing
introduced
a
new
rule
in
2011
that
requires
green
rooftops
with
living
vegetation
on
buildings
that
have
fewer
than
12
floors,
are
shorter
than
45
meters
and
were
built
within
the
last
20
years.
Lu
Bin,
a
landscape
designer
in
Beijing,
said
he
had
never
seen
any
building
in
Beijing
with
rooftop
houses,
though
some
have
pavilions
on
the
top.
To
avoid
safety
hazards,
landscape
designers
usually
use
grass
and
low-growing
plants
for
rooftop
greening,
he
said.
Rooftop
villas
have
surfaced
as
an
issue
before.
In
October,
residents
in a
12-story
building
in
Wuhan,
Hubei
province,
complained
of
serious
leaking
from
a
rusted
pipe
on
the
top
floor.
The
pipe
was
unreachable
because
it
was
underneath
one
of
the
four
villas
on
the
roof.
The
developer
of
the
residential
building
completed
the
building
and
villas
in
1999
and
later
sold
the
villas.
Some
people
still
live
on
the
roof,
said
a
woman
surnamed
Liu
who
works
for
the
property
management
office.
She
declined
to
give
her
full
name.
The
entire
property
was
built
with
authorities'
approval.
The
four
villas
have
the
required
certificates
of
house
ownership
and
the
right
to
use
the
land,
Liu
said.
The
city
planning
bureau
in
Wuhan
investigated
the
case
after
receiving
complaints
from
residents.
The
leaks
were
repaired.
And
residents
have
withdrawn
their
complaints,
said
Tang
Jun
from
the
bureau’s
law
enforcement
team.