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Paris delights come to Shanghai

A Chinese developer has brought the delights of Paris to a housing estate on the outskirts of Shanghai, including the Eiffel Tower.

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BEIJING: A Chinese developer has brought the delights of Paris to a housing estate on the outskirts of Shanghai, including the world’s second-largest replica of the Eiffel Tower.

Tianducheng, a gated community near Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province, boasts its own Arc de Triomphe and rows of European-style villas to attract China’s newly wealthy.

“(It) can house up to 1,00,000 people comfortably,” said Lu Xiaotian, a director at the Zhejiang Guangsha Co. Ltd, the estate’s developer. Only 2,000 people currently reside in the complex which opened in June after five years of meticulous landscaping.

They have the space to sit on the steps by the Bassin de Latone, an imitation of the famous fountain in the gardens of the Palace of Versailles, and admire the Eiffel Tower looming above.

Tianducheng’s Eiffel Tower is 108 metres high, second only to the 165-metre replica at the Paris Las Vegas hotel in Nevada, and 8 metres higher than the third-largest in China’s city of Shenzhen.

“After the completion of its third and final phase, Tianducheng compound will offer amenities ranging from a country club, a school and a hospital, in the midst of the serene surroundings of a park atmosphere,” according to a promo on the Zhejiang government website.

Spurred by common notions of France as a romantic destination, Chinese honeymooners flock to Paris, and French wine, handbags and designer labels — both real and fake — are popular status symbols in major Chinese cities. Tianducheng is the latest in a growing line of housing communities designed to evoke the charm and lifestyle of old European cities.

Thames Town, an hour’s drive from Shanghai’s skyscrapers, features Georgian and Victorian-style terraced houses, and caused a minor uproar after English publican Gail Caddy accused it of replicating her pub and fish-and-chip shop in Lyme Regis, England.

Italian and German towns are also under construction, and a Chinese firm in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, was recreating Dorchester, a village in Dorset that inspired novelist Thomas Hardy.

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