Legal Framework of Urban Underground Space in China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. International Comparison
2.1. Underground Space Legal Framework in Various Countries
2.2. Underground Space Legal Framework in Japan
2.2.1. Legal System of Underground Space in Japan
- (1)
- Civil code and comprehensive law. At the beginning of the development of underground space, the basic civil law at the national level was introduced, which refers to the Japanese Civil Code and the Real Estate Registration Act. In 1966, Japan made a partial amendment to the Civil Code. Without changing the whole legal framework, Article 269 about rights of superficies was added. In addition, it has special regulations on the registration procedure of the superficies according to Article 111 (2) of Real Estate Registration Act, in particular in the range of vertical use.
- (2)
- From single (special) laws to comprehensive laws. Since the 19th century, Japan has enacted special laws for different fields of underground space utilization, such as the Track Act of 1921, the Land Acquisition Law of 1951, the Sewerage Law of 1958, The Rivers Act of 1964, the Urban Planning Law of 1968, the Railways Act of 1980, the Electrical Communication Business Act of 1984, etc. Until 2001, the Law on Special Measures for the Public Use of Deep was promulgated, which is a comprehensive law. It shows that the trend of the legal system of underground space in Japan is from the single management regulated by special laws to the integrated administrative system regulated by comprehensive law. This Act specifically stipulates that the attribute and principles of underground property rights, the start-stop scope of “deep underground” is between 10 and 40 m below ground level. [37], as well as the approval procedures and related compensation for underground space utilization and development, etc.
- (3)
- Supplementary laws. The auxiliary legislation for UUS utilization is complete. Especially, some supplementary laws have detailed regulations on construction funds, daily maintenance and financing of underground space development, for example, the Emergency Measures for Traffic Safety Facilities, the Local Autonomy Law for the Road Development Funds and, and the Local Finance Law.
2.2.2. Underground Master Plan and Administrative Organization in Japan
- (1)
- Underground master planning in Japan.
- (2)
- Streamlining government organizations and three-party management.
3. Methodology
3.1. UUS Hierarchical Legal Framework in the Research Area
- (1)
- The first type is laws enacted by the National People’s Congress (NPC) and Standing Committee, which has the highest legal status and force except Constitution. There are few laws regulating UUS development and utilization, such as some articles of The Property Law (2007) and the Civil Air Defense Law (1997).
- (2)
- The second type is administrative statutes and local statutes, which both are enacted by a legislative authority that governs a state, province, autonomous regions, municipalities and mega cities. Administrative statutes are enacted by the State Council (SC) through the legislative process, and the legal force is second to the Constitution and laws. The current representative UUS administrative regulation is the Interim Regulation on Real Estate Registration (2015).
- (3)
- The third type is the departmental regulations and local government regulations. The departmental regulations issued by the Ministries and Commissions under the State Council and local governments through the legislative process, such as Regulation for the Administration of Urban Underground Space Development and Utilization issued by Ministry of Construction in 1997 and amended in 2001. Generally speaking, the legal force of departmental regulations is lower than those of the constitution, laws and administrative statutes (the article 95(2) of the Legislation Law).
- (4)
- The fourth type is normative documents (the so-called “red tape”) promulgated respectively by Ministries and Commissions under the State Council and local departments through Administrative Decision-making, whose legal force are inferior to the above three types. Examples of this are the Standard for Basic Terminology of urban underground space utilization issued by the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development in 2015.
3.2. Methodological Approach and Data Collection
4. Results and Analysis
4.1. Significantly Increasing Number of UUS Laws And Regulations
4.2. Distribution of Local Statutes and Regulations
4.3. Lack of Superordinate Law of UUS at the National Level
4.4. Content Interpretation of UUS Laws and Regulation Issued
4.4.1. Disunity of UUS Local Legislation Standard
4.4.2. Deficiency of UUS Special Statutes and Regulations
- (1)
- The UUS ownership issues that investors are most concerned about, such as registration of the ownership of UUS buildings, the civil air defense basement, the property rights of the underground garage under the high-rise residential buildings and engineering connectivity, as well as UUS adjacent rights and priority rights, have not been clearly defined (particularly in vertical height) in the existing UUS policies, leading to misunderstanding and disputes among local governments and investors.
- (2)
- Special legislation for UUS market-oriented management is still non-existing, lacking in laws and regulations specifically for underground space market-oriented operation, particularly in specialized policies for paid-transfer using, declaration, approval of urban underground space, as well as private capital investing, financing, preferential promotion, etc.
- (3)
- Codes and technical standards for UUS utilization are being improved, some construction standards related to underground complex, particularly in junction between subway station and surrounding buildings, are also being conducted [44]. Codes and standards for some safety and disaster prevention of underground engineering, application and quality standards of special materials, health safety and environmental protection for underground projects are also being completed. Until now, there is only a Standard for basic terminology of UUS utilization (2015).
4.4.3. Fragmentation and Disconnection of UUS Local Statutes and Regulations
5. Solution: Proposed New UUS Legal Framework in China
5.1. Form a Top-down Unified UUS Legal Framework
5.1.1. Improvement of Special Statutes and Regulations
5.1.2. Formulation of Supplementary Policies and Documents
5.2. Improvement of Existing Laws and Regulations Related to UUS
5.3. Unified UUS Planning and Management Committee
- (1)
- Integration of UUS planning into the Unified Master Planning.
- (2)
- Establishment of an integrated UUS management committee.
6. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Level | Legal System | Number | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Issued Subject (Government Organ) | Decision-making Procedure | ||||
National level | law | 0 | NPC and Standing Committee | Legislative Procedure | |
Administrative Statutes | 0 | The State Council (SC) | |||
Departmental regulations | 2 | Ministries & Commissions under the SC | |||
Normative Documents | 1 | The SC and Ministries &Commissions | Administrative Decision-making | ||
Local Level | Provincial Level | Local Statutes | 0 | Provincial NPC and Standing Committee | Legislative Procedure |
Government regulations | 9 | Provincial Government | Administrative Decision-making | ||
Normative Documents | 8 | Departments of Provincial Level | |||
Municipality Level | Local Statutes | 2 | Municipality NPC and its Standing Committee | Legislative Procedure | |
Government Regulations | 8 | Municipality Government | Administrative Decision-making | ||
Normative Documents | 5 | Departments of Municipality level | |||
City Level | Local Statutes | 2 | Municipal NPC and Standing Committee | Legislative Procedure | |
Government Regulations | 109 | Municipal Government | Administrative Decision-making | ||
Normative Documents | 27 | Departments of Municipal level | |||
Total | 173 |
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Zhang, Z.; Paulsson, J.; Gong, J.; Huan, J. Legal Framework of Urban Underground Space in China. Sustainability 2020, 12, 8297. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208297
Zhang Z, Paulsson J, Gong J, Huan J. Legal Framework of Urban Underground Space in China. Sustainability. 2020; 12(20):8297. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208297
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Zhi, Jenny Paulsson, Jian Gong, and Ji’e Huan. 2020. "Legal Framework of Urban Underground Space in China" Sustainability 12, no. 20: 8297. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208297
APA StyleZhang, Z., Paulsson, J., Gong, J., & Huan, J. (2020). Legal Framework of Urban Underground Space in China. Sustainability, 12(20), 8297. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12208297