Houze Song


Articles by Houze Song
WUHAN, CHINA - MAY 11: (CHINA OUT) A cash coin shape of door stands on a bridge in Jiangxia District on May 11, 2016 in Wuhan, Hubei Province of China. Three words "Kai, Tong, Bao" are marked on the ten-meter-high door which seems to copy from Kai Yuan Tong Bao, ancient Chinese coins in Tang Dynasty.  (Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)
WUHAN, CHINA - MAY 11: (CHINA OUT) A cash coin shape of door stands on a bridge in Jiangxia District on May 11, 2016 in Wuhan, Hubei Province of China. Three words "Kai, Tong, Bao" are marked on the ten-meter-high door which seems to copy from Kai Yuan Tong Bao, ancient Chinese coins in Tang Dynasty. (Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)
This photo taken on May 28, 2015 shows a worker walking past a sculpture of a dragon near rusting pipes at the Shougang Capital Iron and Steel plant in Beijing. Founded in 1919, Shougang was once the largest steel plant in China, with tens of thousands of workers. But the facility was identified as the Chinese capitals biggest polluter and began a gradual shutdown in 2005 as part of an effort to improve air quality ahead of the 2008 Olympics, finally producing its last steel in early 2011. Local officials have said the 8.6 square km (3.3 square mile) facility will be turned into an arts, tourism and finance hub, but progress has been slow and the decaying site is still reportedly blighted by soil pollution built up during the plants industrial heyday.  AFP PHOTO / GREG BAKER        (Photo credit should read GREG BAKER/AFP/Getty Images)
This photo taken on May 28, 2015 shows a worker walking past a sculpture of a dragon near rusting pipes at the Shougang Capital Iron and Steel plant in Beijing. Founded in 1919, Shougang was once the largest steel plant in China, with tens of thousands of workers. But the facility was identified as the Chinese capitals biggest polluter and began a gradual shutdown in 2005 as part of an effort to improve air quality ahead of the 2008 Olympics, finally producing its last steel in early 2011. Local officials have said the 8.6 square km (3.3 square mile) facility will be turned into an arts, tourism and finance hub, but progress has been slow and the decaying site is still reportedly blighted by soil pollution built up during the plants industrial heyday. AFP PHOTO / GREG BAKER (Photo credit should read GREG BAKER/AFP/Getty Images)