'The coolest nail house in history'
By Kent Ewing
Hanging on by a nail...
HONG KONG - It appears to teeter precariously on a narrow mound of earth surrounded by a massive excavation pit that would be a shopping mall. In the southwestern Chinese municipality of Chongqing, the modest two-story brick structure - a dot on the decimated landscape - is called the "nail house" because it seems to be nailed to the ground by its owners' stubbornness.
And the woman who is largely responsible for the three-year battle with a property developer and local authorities that has - so far, anyway - saved her home from the wrecking ball is called "the stubborn nail".
After accepting compensation offers, 280 other homeowners long ago moved out of the rapidly developing neighborhood of Yangjiaping, leaving Wu Ping and her husband, Yang Wu, in a lonely David-versus-Goliath struggle. Their widely publicized ordeal has tapped into widespread resentment against greedy developers who collude with local officials to run roughshod over ordinary citizens in the name of profit and progress.
Land seizures in the name of development are commonplace in today's China, as are demonstrations, often violent, against those seizures. In many cases, outside the media spotlight, property developers and local authorities have hired thugs to enforce their will...cont'd
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/IC31Cb01.html----------
Chinese developers jump the gun
Home buyers have been warned that it has become common practice in rapidly urbanizing China for developers - with the complicity and encouragement of local officials - to build housing on sites before the land has even been approved by the provincial government for such use. - Olivia Chung (Mar 28, '07)
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/IC29Cb01.html