Tian'anmen Square streamlines flowers for frugality
BEIJING - National Day visitors to Tian'anmen Square, the Chinese capital landmark, will see smaller and simpler parterres than in previous years.
Parterre decorations are usually an important part of preparations for National Day, which falls on October 1, and those in the Tian'anmen Square are major tourist attractions.
This year, however, in a bid to implement the central leadership's guidelines on curbing extravagance, the city government will slash its spending on decorations, said Yang Zhihua, an official with the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Landscape and Forestry, in an interview with Xinhua on Wednesday.
There will be an 18.2-meter-high parterre in the center of the square but no such plant arrangements on the sides, while those near the monument in the square will be smaller than usual, Yang said.
Ten parterres will also be set up along Chang'an Avenue, the city's main street, but none in front of any city government buildings, he said.
"We have selected more flowers of local species that survive Beijing's autumn weather and bloom longer," the official explained. "In some locations, we will replace flowers with green plants. These measures will reduce the maintenance cost and save manpower."
The country is in the middle of a campaign to boost ties between officials and the public and exorcise undesirable work styles such as formalism, bureaucracy, hedonism and extravagance.
Last week, the Communist Party of China Central Commission for Discipline Inspection issued a circular urging officials to refrain from luxurious banquets and gift-giving ahead of the Mid-Autumn Festival, a traditional mooncake-eating occasion that falls on September 19 this year, and the National Day holidays from October 1 to 7.
China Central Television, the country's national TV network, also cut half of its festival evening galas from September to December in response to the campaign.
The anti-extravagance efforts have affected a number of national political and social events.
The annual parliamentary session in March also adopted a series of measures to ban extravagance and formalism. There were no flowers used to decorate lawmakers' hotel rooms and no welcoming ceremonies held at airport or railway stations, while traffic controls to facilitate lawmakers' commutes were strictly limited.
Business for liquor, flower and luxury gift shops, as well as high-end restaurants, has soured since the party and government cut their spending.
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Party bans extravagance, bureaucracy