
A worker walks in between temporary housing
being built for residents affected by an earthquake in Dujiangyan, west
of Chengdu, Sichuan Province May 22, 2008. Millions of people became
homeless after a massive earthquake hit the province on May 12.
China's Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development said
Thursday that it had requested local authorities in earthquake-hit
areas to build 1 million temporary homes by Aug. 10 to accommodate
quake victims of the May 12 earthquake.
A circular issued by
the ministry said the transitional homes should be either assembled
with steel sandwich panels or made of light-weight steel and plywood
kit sets.
The size of the houses should be about 20 square meters and provide minimum living space for quake victims, it said.
They should be capable of withstanding earthquakes and be recyclable after three to five years of use, said the circular.
It
also stipulated that local authorities should construct one primary
school, one clinic and one retail store for every 1,000 temporary
homes.
For every 2,000 houses, a middle school should be built, it added.
On
May 12, an 8.0-magnitude earthquake jolted southwest China and affected
many other parts of the country. The death toll had increased to 51,151
as 10 a.m. Thursday, according to the Information Office of the State
Council.
In Sichuan Province, 2.9 million houses were
flattened and almost 14 million others damaged, making millions of
people homeless, according to a rough estimate.




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