The Nanfang / Blog

Haohao

Shenzhen has, apparently, the worst traffic congestion in all of China

Posted: 03/14/2013 12:54 pm

If you’re reading this article stuck in a traffic jam in Shenzhen, then we have some unfortunate news for you: you’d better get used to it.

In fact, traffic congestion will get significantly worse as more than 2.25 million cars are registered to drive on Shenzhen’s highways and byways – the densest concentration of vehicles per square kilometre of any major city in China.

Despite this, city officials seem happy with the status quo and see no reason to introduce restrictions on car purchases.

Other cities, like Guangzhou, have followed Beijing and Shanghai in introducing a lottery for license plates, which restricts the number of cars legally allowed to be on the road.

The number of automobiles on the road in Shenzhen has been growing by leaps and bounds, from 1 million cars in 2007 to 1.5 million in 2010 and 2 million by February last year. Considering private cars remain the ultimate status symbol in China, analysts don’t expect demand to subside anytime soon.

Source: Shenzhen Evening News via SCMP

Photo: Connie/Flickr

Haohao
  • Jon Swazack

    It doesn’t surprise me. Public transport in Shenzhen is ok although the metro gets crowded it’s not as bad as Shanghai, Beijing or Guangzhou from my experience.

    Where Shenzhen fails is the lack of infrastructure for bicycles and motorised 2 wheelers. Bike lanes are a joke in Shenzhen, not maintained or not lit, dangerous and sometimes leading absolutely nowhere. Residents of Shenzhen are kind of given little choice in the matter aspiring to have a car is pretty much the only choice.

    I wish they wouldn’t park on the pavement too.

  • Sam

    Misuse of statistics. Everyone knows traffic in other cities, Beijing for example, is much worse. Number of square kms divided by number of cars doesn’t tell you how congested the roads will be. Poorly planned road networks, available public transport options, population density, etc. are what cause traffic jams, not number of cars.

    • http://www.thenanfang.com Cam MacMurchy

      Sam, agreed… I visit Beijing several times a year, and it is *way* worse than any traffic jam I’ve ever seen in Shenzhen. Shenzhen is a newly-developed city and was much more prepared for automobiles than Beijing, which is a historic city with ring roads designed for bicycles.

  • Leasure Suite Larry

    Well, at least they don’t drive like blind donkeys…

AROUND THE WEB
Keep in Touch

What's happening this week in Shenzhen, Dongguan and Guangzhou? Sign up to be notified when we launch the This Week @ Nanfang newsletter.

sign up for our newsletter

Nanfang TV