2016-01-22forbes.com

Like most other cities in China, Lanzhou found a need to expand and create new areas for development. Urban construction land is one of the most valuable commodities in modern China, and the building of new cities, districts, hi-tech zone, logistics centers, and infrastructure is what keeps the fiscal wheels of this country's local municipalities spinning. In this climate, running out of new development land can be akin to a financial travesty, but this is exactly what once happened in Lanzhou -- a city that's built on a 50 kilometer strip of land that's wedged down into the Yellow River Valley, hemmed in by mountains.

So what was Lanzhou to do? The answer was evident: the city would simply remove the barriers to its expansion. If it was the mountains that prevented the city from achieving its full economic potential then the mountains would need to go.



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