China Failed THIS $100BN Forest City. WHY Residents Escape From It?

Published 2024-04-16
Hello and Welcome to Legendary Builds. Today we are in Malaysia, where we are discussing the infamous "Forest City" - a project that was supposed to attract attention and a lot of money. It also breaks new records in terms of modern design. But something went really wrong. Let's take a look at this amazing city and let me explain why it's almost a ghost town these days.

CHAPTERS:
INTRO: 0:00 - 1:05
HISTORY: 1:05 - 4:15
COLLAPSE: 4:15 - 8:52
PRESENT: 8:52 - 10:20
Our Team:
Written By: Uzair
www.upwork.com/freelancers/~01eb8e7390a57e1e8d?ref…
Narrated by: Ryllan
   / @kallipolisradio  
Edited By - Muhhamad
www.upwork.com/freelancers/zubairchandio
Thumbnail By - Amir
www.upwork.com/freelancers/~0127d3170ca1ca2069
CEO of The Project - Maciek
Contact me on Discord - quantum8608

All Comments (11)
  • Maybe it is fengshui as it was reclaimed from the sea. But sure it will start to sink like those in China Mainland without the proper maturity of the reclaimed ground
  • @d.c.484
    Solution is to sell the units a bit lower than KL's typical property prices. Their priority right now is to get people to live there and not profit since time is not on their side to recoup their losses.
  • this is written while in China, today spent about 2 hours in the car looking at countless 30-story apartment buildings that are vacant and a plethora of those in the midst of being constructed, and this is all in a relatively tiny city of maybe 150,000. rest assured, the Chinese government does 'not' throw money away -- China's 'always' ahead of the curve meaning when a large business wants to locate guess where it'll be located, that's right close to these countless now empty apartment buildings. New manufacturing locations must be approved by government here. while in the US many businesses that want to locate at X location are often hesitant since there are no workers, and there's no housing for, say 2000 new workers, China's housing policy kinda has much of that issue worked out to some degree. China sorta lives by the adage 'if you build it they will come'...
  • The robot reading this script has a choppy, random emphasis completely unrelated to the meannings of the sentences or the weighings of the ideas. You need to replace it with an English-speaking human. The voice is pleasant enough, so we can see why YouTube is turning more and more to robots, but the comprehension simply isn't there.