Elias Groll


Articles by Elias Groll
625037_120824_FSA1.jpg
625037_120824_FSA1.jpg
Junge, Heiko/AFP/GettyImages
Junge, Heiko/AFP/GettyImages

Breivik Won

Foreign Policy's index of the 75 most dynamic global cities contains more than a few surprises, but perhaps none more so than the fact that 29 of these cities are in China -- far and away the most of any country on the list. As part of its mad dash toward modernization, China has rapidly urbanized, spawning a slew of massive cities whose size is only tempered by the surprising fact that most people in the West have never heard of them. Despite their relative anonymity, these are the cities likely to drive the world economy during coming decades. Some are high-tech manufacturers; others are bathed in smoke produced by the factories that not long ago were a common sight in Western countries. Meet the 29 Chinese cities powering global growth.      Shanghai: Although Shanghai had no skyscrapers in 1980, it now has at  least 4,000 -- more than twice as many as New York. In 2010, 208 million square  feet of real estate, nearly 80 times the square footage of New York's massive One World Trade  Center, was constructed in the city. Above, the Jinmao Building and Oriental Pearl TV Tower can be seen dominating the Shanghai skyline as its rises from the banks of Huangpu River.
Foreign Policy's index of the 75 most dynamic global cities contains more than a few surprises, but perhaps none more so than the fact that 29 of these cities are in China -- far and away the most of any country on the list. As part of its mad dash toward modernization, China has rapidly urbanized, spawning a slew of massive cities whose size is only tempered by the surprising fact that most people in the West have never heard of them. Despite their relative anonymity, these are the cities likely to drive the world economy during coming decades. Some are high-tech manufacturers; others are bathed in smoke produced by the factories that not long ago were a common sight in Western countries. Meet the 29 Chinese cities powering global growth. Shanghai: Although Shanghai had no skyscrapers in 1980, it now has at least 4,000 -- more than twice as many as New York. In 2010, 208 million square feet of real estate, nearly 80 times the square footage of New York's massive One World Trade Center, was constructed in the city. Above, the Jinmao Building and Oriental Pearl TV Tower can be seen dominating the Shanghai skyline as its rises from the banks of Huangpu River.

The East Is Rising

Joshua Lott/Getty Images
Joshua Lott/Getty Images
Alex Wong/Getty Images
Alex Wong/Getty Images
LEON NEAL/AFP/GettyImages
LEON NEAL/AFP/GettyImages
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627211_120612_sweden1.jpg