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PDF Editor FAQ

What was the intended purpose of the huge concrete foundations across the street from the National Library in Bucharest?

If you’re referring to this huge waste of perfectly usable, downtown space, it currently has no purpose.Initially it was a personal project of Nicolae Ceausescu, who during the 80s planned to build the Center for Creation and Culture “The Chant of Romania” (”Centrul de Creaţie şi Cultură „Cântarea României“) that would have promoted proper Communist ethics and culture:The National Festival “The Chant of Romania”Shortly after the foundation was laid the regime was toppled and construction halted. Afterwards some 96 people filed claims to parts of the land and more than a dozen legal battles commenced. The local government had to spend millions of dollars in order to compensate the various claimants. During all this time the land remained in a state of abandonment and decay. Some legal battles are still ongoing as of this writing.Around 2007 a construction company tried to secure a contract for a number of residential buildings but the project never took off.There are currently plans to build a “Justice Quarter” (ie an ensemble of buildings that would house various judicial institutions) but a dispute over who should own the land, the Bucharest City Council or the Ministry of Justice, prevents the project from starting. When completed it should look like this:Whether this downtown space would be better used as a business park, a residential area, or even a playground is up for debate (I certainly think so), but even this would be an improvement over the current situation.I hope this answers your question.

Why are homes so expensive in Hong Kong?

The prices of housing in Hong Kong are artificially inflated, not by a shortage of land, but by an excess of greed.Here’s how I learned that.I studied at HKUST, which is at the very East edge of Kowloon, far from the city center. As a postgrad student, I was offered a guaranteed space on campus for two years, which is subsidized at about 3000 HKD per month for a single room.I lived on campus for the first year.During the second year I got an internship outside HK so I cancelled my housing contract (didn’t want to pay for it if I wasn’t going to be living there, and there’s no option to come back after leaving). Which means after my internship finished and I came back to Hong Kong, there would be no place on campus for me. I’d be on my own.By the time I came back, I had less than a year left before graduation. And my only income was a modest monthly stipend from the university. So my criteria for housing were: affordable (ideally as close to 3000 as I could get), single room (I’ve grown out of dorm life), and near campus or convenient to get there by public transport. Reasonable criteria, I supposed, especially due to the fact that my situation was not rare—there are plenty of students who stay longer than their two-year guaranteed housing allotment (PhDs) who need to live off campus.I assumed there would be plenty of feasible options, given the commonness of my situation. Having moved around a lot during my studies in the US, and elsewhere, I was assured that it was the same everywhere and that I’d have no problem finding a place. I was wrong.First of all, I should mention that, while airbnb’s are usually a bit above market value everywhere, they are exhorbitantly so here, especially in comparison to size and quality. That was off the table. Subletting wasn’t a realistic option considering the remote location of the campus and the sparse residential areas nearby. Which left renting as the only available option. And that turned out to be a complete nightmare. Here’s why:Landlords assume, because we are students, we would be willing to accept the poorest of housing conditions, and pay market price for it because it’s near the campus and there are no other options. The village near HKUST, Tai Po Tsai, is a residential area, most likely formerly inhabited by fishermen (and women?), due to the proximity of the coast. But nowadays, it’s overrun with students. But as opposed to the way a neighborhood conventionally develops (i.e.“gentrifies”) when it become a hub for students, the apartments there were shoddy, smelly, and small, and often crammed with two or more beds per room. “Why should I invest money in renovations if they have no other options? Who cares if their living conditions are poor when we can still make good money!”(a two-bed room in Tai Po Tsai, too small to even capture the whole thing in the frame)2. The second thing I discovered was that it was practically impossible to rent a place for less than one year. Landlords in Hong Kong are unwilling to risk losing a few months’ rent during the period of finding a new tenant, regardless of how inconvenient that makes it for us students. When I suggested, on two different occasions, that they should allow us to sign for less than a year because we are international students who will be graduating soon, I was literally laughed at, twice. “It’s the university’s problem if you don’t have an adequate housing arrangement”, is what they told me. But what they meant was: “Risk losing a month’s rent?! What a ridiculous idea when we can just band together and exploit people who have no other options!”(the housing agent showed me this phone conversation she had with another student )Such is the mindset of the wealthy class in Hong Kong. It’s the same greed that permeates all layers of the city’s current economy. The same greed that causes landowners to lobby government offices to put restrictions on land able to be used for development.Greed is at the core of the city’s problems, and people are suffering because of it. I’m the very least of it. It not only represents a disregard for the well-being of students, but for all Hong Kong residents except its elite.At the end of the day, I believe that justice is inevitably served. Hong Kong’s economy is declining in global relevance as cities on the mainland thrive. It’s only a matter of time before the entire market crashes and people go into utter panic, whereupon people will finally open their eyes to the root of the problem and do something about it. Unfortunately, it will only get worse before it gets better.P.S. - if you’re wondering where I ended up living, the answer is: friends' dorms, a university lab, and Chungking mansions, for about five months, until this happened.

Which is better for house purposes: biogas, solar panels, or a wind turbine? Why?

Probably solar panels. Unless you live someplace very dark. If you have more land, 5 acres or so, and good wind, you can place a wind turbine far enough from the house to not annoy you. Biogas, I will pick my favorite option, rather than try to guess which you meant. Biogas from organic wastes, via gasification generator is viable with the same roughly 5 acres. Fortunately, I know of no off the shelf residential sized gasifiers. The solar and wind you can buy. You would have to build or contract the gasifier.

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