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China / Cover Story

Preserving the past to finance the future

By Yan Yiqi (China Daily) Updated: 2015-05-07 07:43

Preserve and protect

Preserving the past to finance the future

An elderly resident relaxes in Yangjiatang village in Songyang. Photo by Yan Yiqi/China Daily]

Youtian and Yangjiatang are two of 50 villages in Songyang that have been listed as traditional Chinese villages - those with cultural and historical features worth preserving and protecting - by the ministries of culture, finance, and housing and urban-rural development. By January, 2,555 villages across China had been added to the list.

Huo Xiaowei, editor-in-chief of Traditional Chinese Villages Bulletin, said it will be difficult to pass these villages down to the coming generations.

"The conservation and development of China's historic villages has been seriously threatened and faced enormous challenges during the rapid economic development that has occurred in China in the past few decades. The expected increase in the urbanization rate from 53.7 percent in 2013 to 70 percent in 2030 means many villages, including some historic ones, face the prospect of being demolished," he said.

In response, Songyang has moved to develop and protect the village. Last year, reconstruction projects, costing a total of about 20 million yuan ($3.2 million), started in more than 20 villages, including Youtian and Yangjiatang.

Wang Jun, Songyang's magistrate, said that the plan is to protect these ancient villages by developing tourism.

"To encourage villagers to stay and renovate the old houses, we need to offer them sufficient income. Tourism seems to cause the least harm to the environment," he said.

Luo Deyin, professor of architecture at Tsinghua University in Beijing, has participated in the reconstruction of two historic houses in Songyang's Pingtian village. He supports the plan to save the villages through tourism.

Luo, who has worked on reconstruction projects in traditional villages in several provinces, said the ancient villages will quickly die if the infrastructure for basic tourism isn't put in place.

"Currently, the simplest and most effective way of helping a traditional village to survive in a time of rapid urbanization is the development of local tourism," he said, adding that tourism brings outsiders to the villages, creating opportunities for them to make contact with the residents.

"This will eventually alter the villagers' views of their cultural relics, and they will try to protect them instead of tearing them down," he said.

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