Powerful Beijing doctor’s illegal structure tops them all

A view of the fake mountain and trees on top of the residential building in Beijing’s upscale Park View estate. Photo: Simon Song
By Vicky Feng for the South China Morning Post

When it comes to illegal structures, a rooftop villa built by an eccentric Beijing resident on top of a 26-storey residential building puts Henry Tang’s wine cellar to shame.

Beijing’s chengguan, or urban management, officials on Monday issued an ultimatum to a former government advisor, demanding he tear down the sprawling structure that he had built over the last six years on top of his top-floor flat. The rooftop house features elaborate fake rocks, real trees and grass, and covers the entire top of the building. Parts of the structure look as if they could spill over the edge of the roof at any time.

The bizarre two-storey structure, located in a high-end residential compound called Park View in Beijing’s Haidian district, an area of government institutions and universities, has bothered the building’s residents for years. Local newspapers have identified the owner as Zhang Biqing, a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine and former member of a district People’s Political Consultative Conference who owns a national chain of acupunture clinics.

Zhang Biqing, the owner of the rooftop villa. Photo: SCMP Pictures

Disturbed by constant noise from heavy construction machinery working on the roof, water leaks and worried about structural damage to the whole building, neighbours have complained repeatedly to the building management company, local urban management officials and even the police. The new ultimatum, published Monday evening on many local news sites, urges the owner to dismantle the structure himself within 15 days. Failure to comply would result in forcible demolition, it says.

When confronted earlier by reporters from local newspaper Beijing Morning News, Zhang, who sometimes identified himself as a professor, had said, “Since I dare to live here, I am not worried about complaints.

“Famous people come to my place and sing. How can you stop them?” the newspaper quoted him as saying about the noise at night.

Some neighbours who had complained over the years suffered harrassment and threats from the owner, Zhang Biqing, local newspapers have reported. One 77-year-old man was beaten up several times by Zhang and eventually forced to move, it was reported. Police didn’t seem to have intervened.

The community’s property management office declined to comment and phone calls to the Haidian district urban management office went unanswered on Monday.

The “rooftop garden villa” might not be the only illegal construction in this community, Chinese netizens have found out.

A property agent posted photos of another apparently illegal rooftop house online in late 2011, featuring a blueprint of a three-storey structure with more than a dozen rooms and a bird’s eye view of a nearby lake.

A view of the fake mountain and trees on top of the residential building in Beijing’s upscale Park View estate. Photo: Simon Song

The structure, which the agent also called a “rooftop garden villa”, had a total indoor area of more than 590 square metres and an asking price of 15 million yuan (HK$19 million).

When contacted by phone by thePost on Monday, Sun Jianchao, a Beijing real estate agent who posted the pictures, denied the structure in the pictures was the same one in the news this week, but declined to give more details.

Some Chinese netizens mocked the rooftop house. “Even the Hanging Gardens of Babylon are overshadowed by this hanging villa in Beijing,” said one Weibo user.

Others were angry at the owner with one internet user saying, “How can this guy be a professor? He gained his happiness by torturing others.” Many also expressed anger at the failure of chengguan officials, known for their thuggish, often brutal behaviour throughout the country while dealing with unlicensed street vendors, in enforcing the law on the rich and powerful.

Almost all add-on structures or alterations to residential buildings are illegal in China. However, this hasn’t stopped thousands of owners of top-floor or ground-floor properties from adding rooms, and even floors, to their homes, or encroaching into public space by putting up additional walls or fences

Desperate mother tried to set herself on fire in Hong Kong’s July 1 march

BY VICKY FENG

Ran Chongbi stays at a Hong Kong hospital after she was released on bail. (Photo:Vicky Feng)
Ran Chongbi stays at a Hong Kong hospital after she was released on bail. (Photo:Vicky Feng)

(The article first appeared on the South China Morning Post on July 3, 2013)

A mainland mother was released on bail yesterday after apparently trying to set herself alight at the July 1 march to win justice for her daughter.

Ran Chongbi doused clothes she was holding with alcohol and was trying to set them on fire using a lighter when she was stopped by Liu Weiping, a human rights activist who was taking part in the march.

Police took Ran, who escaped injury, from Victoria Park to hospital where she was examined before being taken into custody for suspected disorderly conduct in a public place, according to police.

She was later sent back to hospital again due to poor health.

Speaking from her hospital bed yesterday, the 38-year-old told the South China Morning Post: “I tried to burn myself there to get justice for my daughter.”

Ran’s daughter was raped at five years old in Dongguan, Guangdong, in 2008.

The 50-year-old man who attacked her was jailed for six-and-a-half years. After Ran appealed in 2009, the sentence was increased to seven years.

Ran appealed to the local court to have the sentence increased further but was rejected.

Liu Weiguo, a Chinese human rights lawyer based in Shandong, said: “The judgment was absolutely unfair.”

He added: “According to criminal law in the People’s Republic of China, perpetrators who rape girls under the age of 14 should be jailed for more than 10 years.”

Ran said yesterday: “I don’t have money or power, but the Guangdong government has. It has hired gangsters to persecute us.”

Ran said that her daughter has been suffering ill-health as a result of the attack while she herself has been left jobless as a result of the government harassment and persecution.

“I don’t have the money to cure my daughter,” said Ran. “And her whole life is destroyed.”

Ran’s Hong Kong visa runs out on July 5 and she fears what repercussions she faces back home.

Liu Weiping, the activist who stepped in to stop her actions on Monday, said: “If the international society doesn’t pay attention to her, she will face stronger persecution after going back.”

Ran has been told to report back to police in early September.