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Showing posts with label myanmar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label myanmar. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Strange and Secret Totalitarian Capitals

This past Sunday was the 10th anniversary of Napyidaw, Burma's new capital. I did a post about how the country suddenly moved its capital far into the hinterlands with no explanation and under much secrecy. Much of the city is strangely empty according to those few outsiders who have visited. Totalitarian regimes like to keep their geographic knowledge to themselves. Another example is North Korea's Pyongyang.
http://blogs.loc.gov/maps/2016/03/north-koreas-enigmatic-capital-pyongyang/?loclr=twmap
Unlike Napyidaw, Pyongyang has a long history of settlement but because North Korea was closed off to foreigners after the Korean War, little is known of its recent development. An article from the Library of Congress, Geography and Maps Division shows some of the rare maps available outside the country including this guide for tourists attending a 1989 youth festival.
http://blogs.loc.gov/maps/2016/03/north-koreas-enigmatic-capital-pyongyang/?loclr=twmap
The map is surrounded by pictures meant to highlight power and modernity.
More from the Library of Congress article:
Those who manage to enter the city are chaperoned and follow a strict itinerary; the practice serves to perpetuate both curiosity and mystery. Fortunately, geographic knowledge of the city has been growing by way of satellite imagery. Satellites, however, can only depict but cannot describe. 
 Click for for the full article.

Another country that like Burma suddenly moved its capital to the far northern hinterlands is Kazakhstan. In 1997 they moved the capital from Almaty to the small city of Akmola and then renamed the place Astana, "the capital" in Kazakh. Moving the capital allowed the government to centrally plan a monumental capital city, one full of strange modern architecture.
http://s593.photobucket.com/user/kiraneg/media/Astana_Map_Test_Axis_3.jpg.html
The map above, though hard to read details the top ten architectural wonders of the city in blue. Those wonders are listed on this page, and include the Baiterek Tree of Life (below) as well as the world's largest tent, serving as a mall and entertainment complex and also includes a river, park and beach.
Here is a picture via CNN of the modernistic capital complex.
http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/13/world/asia/eye-on-kazakhstan-astana/
Despite being the world's second coldest capital and being surrounded by many hundreds of miles of mostly empty grasslands, the city does have more life than Napyidaw. It is also much less secretive. Here is a cartoon-ish map of one of the business districts north of downtown, itself a ways north of the capital complex.
http://www.intermovex.kz/images/a_map_en_b.jpg
Lastly, I've always wanted to show some maps of Brazil's capital, Brasilia. While not the product of a totalitarian state, it is also a highly designed landscape created from a mostly blank slate. The design is meant to look like a giant bird or airplane. It looks cool on maps and aerial photos. On the ground, however it's a pretty bleak landscape. Here is the original plan followed by a map.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bras%C3%ADlia#/media/File:Brasilia_-_Plan.JPG

http://www.viagemdeferias.com/mapa/plano-piloto-grande.gif
Here is a night shot from the International Space Station via Wikipedia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bras%C3%ADlia#/media/File:Bras%C3%ADlia_from_space.jpg
Like these other capitals, they favor modernistic architecture.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bras%C3%ADlia#/media/File:Bras%C3%ADlia_Catedral_Metropolitana_noite.jpg
On the ground however, it does not look like a warm, inviting place.
https://sidewalkcity.files.wordpress.com/2010/08/brasilia-img_1564.jpg

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Burma's Ghost Capital Turns 10

Ten years ago today Myanmar (or Burma) suddenly moved its capital from Yangon (Rangoon) to Napyidaw, an area of rice paddies and sugar cane fields.
http://www.mapsofworld.com/myanmar/naypyidaw.html
While the above map via mapsofworld shows many points of interest, the few westerners who have visited the secretive capital have described a mostly barren city full of empty superhighways as detailed in these pictures from the Daily Mail and the Guardian.
http://dailym.ai/1HDg4Ou#i-6a9faa9006328490

http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/mar/19/burmas-capital-naypyidaw-post-apocalypse-suburbia-highways-wifi
 An aerial view from Here Maps shows lots of empty space in the middle of town.

From the Guardian article.
The purpose-built city of Naypyidaw – unveiled a decade ago this year – boasts 20-lane highways, golf courses, fast Wi-Fi and reliable electricity. The only thing it doesn’t seem to have is people...

 

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Map of the Week - GISCorps Helps in Myanmar Cyclone Recovery Efforts

GISCorps is a Peace Corps type of organization for GIS volunteers. In early May the call went out from UNOSAT (the UN's satellite imagery team) to many GIS folks including me for volunteers to help map damage from Cyclone Nargis. Unfortunately I could not handle the time commitment they needed but I often wish I had tried to make the time. Below is a portion of a map showing the extent of building damage in the Irrawaddy Delta region of Myanmar. GISCorps volunteers analyzed satellite images from before and after the storm and did a "change detection analysis" to arrive at these figures and maps.

Further information on this project and more maps can be found here.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Map of the Week 125-Asian Disasters

It's been tough finding good maps of the earthquake area in China. The BBC wins out again with this map although the scale is a bit too zoomed in to get a good sense of the surrounding areas. You do get a sense of how close Chengdu, a city of about 4 million people, is to the epicenter and how severe the quake was there. You can click on the affected cities and get more information - or just scroll down on the same page.



One of the more tragic aspects of the China quake is how it has made many of us forget about the cyclone in Myanmar-Burma (Whatever you prefer to call it) where another city of 4 million Yangon-Rangoon (Whatever you prefer to call it) has been hit.
This is a set of before and after satellite images of Cyclone Nargis from the NASA Earth Observatory. The after image shows the extent of flooding as of May 5th using a combination of color and infrared light to clarify the floodwaters.
Anyway be thankful if you're not in one of these places and hopefully we'll all donate a little to help these people-it could be any of us next time.