首页
登录
职称英语
A South Korean city designed for the future takes on a life of its own
A South Korean city designed for the future takes on a life of its own
游客
2024-01-25
21
管理
问题
A South Korean city designed for the future takes on a life of its own
A) Getting around a city is one thing—and then there’s the matter of getting from one city to another. One vision of the perfect city of the future is a place that offers easy access to air travel. In 2011, a University of North Carolina business professor named John Kasarda published a book called Aerotropolis: The Way We’ll Live Next. Kasarda says future cities should be built intentionally around or near airports. The idea, as he has put it, is to offer businesses "rapid, long-distance connectivity on a massive scale."
B) "The 18th century really was a waterborne (水运的) century, the 19th century a rail century, the 20th century a highway, car, truck century—and the 21st century will increasingly be an aviation century, as the globe becomes increasingly connected by air," Kasarda says. Songdo, a city built from scratch in South Korea, is one of Kasarda’s prime examples. It has existed for just a few years. "From the outset, it was designed on the basis of connectivity and competitiveness," says Kasarda. "The government built the bridge directly from the airport to the Songdo International Business District. And the surface infrastructure was built at the same time as the new airport."
C) Songdo is a stone’s throw from South Korea’s Incheon Airport, its main international hub (枢纽). But it takes a lot more than a nearby airport to be a city of the future. Just building a place as an "international business district" doesn’t mean it will become one. Park Yeon Soo conceived (构想) this city of the future back in 1986. He considers Songdo his baby. Park sees himself as a visionary. Thirty years after he imagined the city, Park’s baby is close to 70 percent built, with 36,000 people living in the business district and 90,000 residents in greater Songdo. It’s about an hour outside Seoul, built on former tidal flats along the Yellow Sea. There’s a Coast Guard building and a tall trade tower, as well as a park, golf course and university.
D) Chances are you’ve actually seen this place. Songdo appears in the most famous music video ever to come out of South Korea. "Gangnam Style" refers to the fashionable Gangnam district in Seoul. But some of the video was filmed in Songdo. "I don’t know if you remember, there was a scene in a subway station. That was not Gangnam. That was actually Songdo," says Jung Won Son, a professor of urban development at London’s Bartlett School of Planning. "Part of the reason to shoot there is that it’s new and nice."
E) The city was supposed to be a hub for global companies, with employees from all over the world. But that’s not how it has turned out. Songdo’s reputation is as a futuristic ghost town. But the reality is more complicated. A bridge with big, light-blue loops leads into the business district. In the center of the main road, there’s a long line of flags of the world. On the corner, there’s a Starbucks and a 7-Eleven—all of the international brands that you see all over the world nowadays.
F) The city is not empty. There are mothers pushing baby carriages, old women with walkers—even in the middle of the day, when it’s 90 degrees out. Byun Young-Jin chairs the Songdo real estate association and started selling property here when the first phase of the city opened in 2005. He says demand has boomed in the past couple of years. Most of his clients are Korean. In fact, the developer says, 99 percent of the homes here are sold to Koreans. Young families move here because the schools are great. And that’s the problem: Songdo has become a popular Korean city—more popular as a residential area than a business one. It’s not yet the futuristic international business hub that planners imagined. "It’s a great place to live. And it’s becoming a great place to work," says Scott Summers, vice-president of Gale International, the developer of the city. The floor-to-ceiling windows of his company’s offices overlook Songdo Central Park, with a canal full of small boats and people fishing. Shimmering (闪烁的) glass towers line the canal’s edge.
G) "What’s happened is that our focus on creating that quality of life first has enabled the residents to live here," Summers says. But there needs to be strong economic incentives for companies to locate here. The city is still unfinished, and it feels a bit like a theme park. It doesn’t feel all that futuristic. There’s a high-tech underground trash disposal system. Buildings are environmentally friendly. Everybody’s television set is connected to a system that streams personalized language or exercise classes.
H) But this is not Star Trek. And to some of the residents, Songdo feels hollow. "I’m, like, in prison for weekdays. That’s what we call it in the workplace," says a woman in her 20s. She doesn’t want to use her name for fear of being fired from her job. She goes back to Seoul every weekend. "I say I’m prison-breaking on Friday nights." But she has to make the prison break in her own car. There’s no high-speed train connecting Songdo to Seoul, just over 20 miles away.
I) Park Yeon Soo, the man who first imagined Songdo, feels frustrated, too. He says he built South Korea a luxury vehicle, "like Mercedes or BMW. It’s a good car now. But we’re waiting for a good driver to accelerate." But there are lots of other good cars out there, too. The world is dotted with futuristic, high-tech cities trying to attract the biggest international companies.
J) Songdo’s backers contend that it’s still early, and business space is filling up—about 70 percent of finished offices are now occupied. Brent Ryan, who teaches urban design at MIT, says Songdo proves a universal principle. "There have been a lot of Utopian (乌托邦的) cities in history. And the reason we don’t know about a lot of them is that they have vanished entirely." In other words, when it comes to cities—or anything else—it is hard to predict the future. [br] Songdo has ended up different from the city it was supposed to be.
选项
答案
E
解析
细节推断题。定位句指出,松岛理应是全球公司的枢纽,员工来自世界各地,但事实并非如此。也就是说,松岛的现实情况和预想不符,故答案为E)。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3391961.html
相关试题推荐
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
[originaltext]Criticismofresearchlaysasignificantfoundationforfuture
Somehousesaredesignedtobesmart.Othershavesmartdesigns.Anexample
Somehousesaredesignedtobesmart.Othershavesmartdesigns.Anexample
Somehousesaredesignedtobesmart.Othershavesmartdesigns.Anexample
随机试题
[originaltext]M:ProfessorWeston,couldIspeaktoyou?W.Yes,butonlyfora
防水卷材的铺设应使防水卷材中线与隧道中线重合,从拱顶开始向两侧下垂铺设,卷材铺设
嘶哑样咳嗽,可见于A、急性喉炎 B、声带疾患 C、百日咳 D、胸膜炎 E
以学生团体测验的平均成绩为参照点的教学评价类型是( )。A.标准参照评价 B
决定血液和组织液之间进行物质交换面积的是( )。A.微动脉 B.毛细血管前括
急性再生障碍性贫血的骨髓象是A.极度增生不良 B.巨核细胞消失 C.桨细胞、
依我国《物权法》的规定,下面说法错误的有:A.土地承包经营权自取得土地承包经营权
实行从量定额和从价定率相结合计算应纳消费税的消费品有()。A.啤酒 B.
企业在编制合并财务报表时,实质上构成对子公司净投资的外币货币性项目以母、子公司的
根据《中华人民共和国环境保护法》环境影响评价信息公开和公众参与的有关规定,下列做
最新回复
(
0
)