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crazy property developments : good for wedding photography

Urban planners and would-be “creative cluster” designers should take heart: in China, designing a walkable faux English village will attract huge amounts of… Wedding parties.

Thames Town is a development in Shanghai’s western suburbs that is designed to look like a replica of an old English village. The fact that it’s completely fake (there’s an empty, giant Church in the middle) doesn’t seem to really bother anyone involved in the photography bit. It’s one of approximately nine such developments (there’s a modern-ancient Chinese town in Zhujiajiao, and a Weimar Republic era town somewhere in the north). Thames Town has been in the news as an example of China’s wild property market: barely anyone actually lives here, even though most of the residential properties have been sold.

There is, however, a thriving industry of wedding photography, since young couples are eager to be photographed and photoshopped in an ersatz paradise. A quick scan through the town found that the only open commercial enterprises were a small cafe, and half a dozen wedding photography studios. On a nice day, the place is crawling with couples in kitschy wedding/period garb, and their photograph entourages. Companies that specialize in this charge Rmb4,000-6,000 for a two day photo shoot, which includes transportation and photo editing.

And here, in one shot, we see three separate parties:

paramount and subway

view from new house

So the new house is perfect for me, as the main room looks out onto this:

china developing neon bla bla bla

Looking northwest in Pudong, near the diamond exchange.

north heading south

tiger balm

Lunar New Year is a wonderful holiday. Everyone stays inside with their families, making the city feel like a Zombie movie. They will, at around 10pm-1am, dash out and light guerilla fireworks (see previous post), making the city feel like a Zombie-War movie. Mmm apocalypse. True to form, at the end of the world, there will of course be hair salons, so people can get their hair cut. Isn’t it nice of this hair salon to stay open late on Lunar New Year’s Eve, while all the other shops are closed?

Happy Tiger Year!