logo
One man and his tower that's a monument to Chen Tianming's determination to live where and how he wants

One man and his tower that's a monument to Chen Tianming's determination to live where and how he wants

NZ Herald20-07-2025
He climbed lightly up the ladders, past the fifth-floor reading nook and the sixth-floor open-air tearoom.
From the ninth floor, he surveyed the sturdy, standardised apartment buildings in the distance where his neighbours live.
'They say the house is shabby, that it could be blown down by wind at any time,' he said — an observation that did not seem altogether far-fetched when I visited him last month.
'But the advantage is that it's conspicuous, a bit eye-catching. People admire it,' he added.
'Other people spend millions, and no one goes to look at their houses.'
Chen's house is so unusual that it has lured gawkers and even tourists to his rural corner of Guizhou province, in southwestern China.
It evokes a Dr Seuss drawing, or the Burrow in Harry Potter. Many people on Chinese social media have compared it to Howl's Moving Castle.
Chen Tianming's house after dark, in Xingyi, China. Photo / Andrea Verdelli, the New York Times
To the casual observer, the house may be a mere spectacle, a Frankensteinian oddity.
To Chen, it is a monument to his determination to live where — and how — he wants, in defiance of the local government, gossiping neighbours and seemingly even common sense.
He began modifying his family home in 2018, when the authorities in the city of Xingyi ordered his village demolished to make way for a resort they planned to build.
Chen's parents, farmers who had built the house in the 1980s, thought that the money that officials were offering as compensation for the move was too low and refused to leave.
When bulldozers began razing their pomegranate trees anyway, Chen rushed home from Hangzhou, the eastern city where he had been working as a package courier.
Along with his brother, Chen Tianliang, he started adding a third floor. At first, the motivation was in part practical: Compensation payment was determined by square footage, and if the house had more floors, they would be entitled to more money.
They visited a second-hand building materials market and bought old utility poles and red composite boards — cheaper than the black ones — and hammered, screwed and notched them together into floorboards, walls and supporting columns.
Then, Chen, who had long had an amateur interest in architecture, wondered what it would be like to add a fourth floor. His brother and parents thought there was no need, so Chen did it alone.
Then, he wondered about a fifth. And a sixth.
Chen Tianming looks at his phone in an upper floor bedroom of his house in Xingyi, China. Photo / Andrea Verdelli, the New York Times
'I just suddenly wanted to challenge myself,' he said. 'And every time I completed my own small task or dream, it felt meaningful.'
He was also fuelled by resentment towards the Government, which kept serving him with demolition orders and sending officials to pressure his family.
By that point, their house was virtually the only one left in the vicinity; his neighbours had all moved into the new apartment buildings about 5km away. (Local officials have maintained to Chinese media that the building is illegal.)
Mass expropriations of land, at times by force, have been a widespread phenomenon in China for decades amid the country's modernisation push.
The homes of those who do manage to hold out are sometimes called 'nail houses', for how they protrude like nails after the area around them has been cleared.
Still, few stick out quite like Chen's.
A former mathematics major who dropped out of university because he felt that higher education was pointless, Chen spent years bouncing between cities, working as a calligraphy salesperson, insurance agent, and courier.
But he yearned for a more pastoral lifestyle, he said. When he returned to the village in 2018 to help his parents fend off the developers, he decided to stay.
'I don't want my home to become a city. I feel like a guardian of the village,' he said, over noodles with homegrown vegetables that his mother had stir-fried on their traditional brick stove.
Distant high-rise residences and colourful lights hanging from one of the floors of Chen Tianming's house, at dusk. Photo / Andrea Verdelli, the New York Times
In recent years, the threat of demolition has become less immediate. Chen filed a lawsuit against the local government and the developers, which is still pending.
In any case, the proposed resort project stalled after the local government ran out of money. (Guizhou, one of China's poorest and most indebted provinces, is littered with extravagant, unfinished tourism projects.)
But Chen has continued building. The house is now a constantly evolving display of his interests and hobbies.
On the first floor, Chen hung calligraphy from artists he befriended in Hangzhou.
On the fifth, he keeps a pile of faded books, mostly about history, philosophy and psychology.
The sixth floor has potted plants and a plank of wood suspended from the ceiling with ropes, like a swing, to hold a mortar and pestle and a teakettle.
On the eighth, a gift from an art student who once visited him: a lamp, with the shade made of tiny photographs of his house from different angles.
With each floor that he added, he moved his bedroom up, too: 'That's what makes it fun'. His parents and brother sleep on the ground floor and rarely make the vertiginous ascent.
Each morning, he inspects the house from top to bottom. To reinforce the fourth and fifth floors, he hauled wooden columns up through the windows with pulleys.
He added the buckets of water throughout the house after a storm blew out a fifth-floor wall. Eventually, he tore down most of the walls on the lower floors, so that wind could pass straight through the structure.
'There's a law of increasing entropy,' Chen said. 'This house, if I didn't care for it, would naturally collapse in two years at most.'
He added: 'But as long as I'm still standing, it will be too'.
Maintenance costs more time than money, he said. He estimated that he had spent a little more than US$20,000 ($33,500) on building materials. He has also spent about US$4000 on lawyers.
His family has been, if not enthusiastic about, at least resigned to Chen's whims.
His parents are accustomed to curious visitors, at least a few every weekend. His brother came up with the idea of illuminating the house at night with lanterns.
Chen Tianming's mother watches TV on the first floor of their house in Xingyi, China. Photo / Andrea Verdelli, the New York Times
They have all united against their fellow villagers, who they say accuse them of being nuisances, or greedy.
'Now we just don't go over there,' said Tianliang, Chen's brother. 'There's no need to listen to what they say about us.'
In town, some residents said exactly what the Chens predicted they would: that the house would collapse any day; that they were troublemakers. (The local government erected a sign near the house warning of safety hazards.)
But others expressed admiration for Chen's creativity.
Zhu Zhiyuan, an employee at a local supermarket, said he had been drawn in when passing by on his scooter and had ventured closer for a better look. Still, he had not dared get too close.
'There are people who say it's illegal,' he said.
Then he added: 'But if they tore it down, that would be a bit of a shame'.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Vivian Wang
Photographs by: Andrea Verdelli
©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stitched into position
Stitched into position

Otago Daily Times

time3 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Stitched into position

Embroidery once defined someone's standing in China, writes Moira White. We are all familiar with a range of id badges — our own or others' — from military dog tags to membership cards or security passes of one form or another. Some we carry, others we wear clipped to a pocket, or on a lanyard around our neck. They convey a range of information that might include a name, job title, place of employment, or sometimes a photograph. However, none that I have seen are even remotely as beautiful as the silk rank badges (buzi) that were worn for centuries by Chinese court officials. Ming dynasty clothing regulations in 1391 required court officials to wear decorative textile patches that showed which of the nine civil or military ranks they had attained. Birds were used to indicate the civil ranks, while the military ranks were denoted by a variety of animals. Censors, who conducted special investigations for the emperor and reported on other officials, had their own badge depicting a mythical creature, the xiezhi. The badge tradition continued into the Qing dynasty, with most showing a representation of the universe: waves below a landscape and central creature, above which were the sky and clouds. The rank badges (sometimes called Mandarin squares) were worn as matching pairs on the front and back of ceremonial robes. Most are more or less square in shape. Because the robes had a centre front opening, badges on the back were a single piece, but those on the front had a vertical split down the middle. They don't, of course, include the name of an individual, but we do know that each person who wore one had been granted permission to do so by the emperor. However, he (the officials were all men) had to provide and pay for the badge himself, which is one explanation for the variations that can be seen in the style and composition of the design. The exams for the civil officials were taken after years of study, so we know at least those who had qualified to wear the badges were hard working, intelligent, and focused. Tūhura Otago Museum has recently received five pairs of civil rank badges that were given to the donor's mother in the mid-20th century, through her association with the Chinese Presbyterian Church in Dunedin. We already had a small number in the collection. The de Beers donated a censor's badge in the 1980s, and Maud Brown gave us four single badges in 1973; none of them are military. She and her husband, the Rev Thomas Brown, worked for the London Missionary Society in China for most of the 1910s and 1920s. In all five pairs of this most recent generous donation, the bird looks towards a circular red sun, representing the emperor. At least three of the pairs show a silver pheasant, denoting the fifth civil rank. Identifying the birds can be a bit of a challenge, not only for me, but the long, serrated tail feathers in many embroidered versions of silver pheasants are distinctive. Apparently, this is the species of bird most frequently encountered in collections of rank badges. The other two pairs show what may be a wild goose (the fourth civil rank). While wives of officials had been entitled to wear the badge of their husband's rank for a long time, researchers suggest that in the mid-18th century, a custom developed for the animal in a wife's badge to face in the opposite direction to those in her husband's. The creatures would then face one another when the couple sat side by side. Our recent gift includes two pairs facing to the left (said to have been those worn by men, as civil officials sat on the left of the emperor), and three to the right. In four of these pairs, the bird stands on one foot on a rock or hill, but in the fifth, the bird flies through a sky of stylised clouds. Even among these examples, there are many variations in the details. Some have auspicious symbols, the border patterns differ, and the plants depicted on the sides, for instance, vary greatly and are perhaps something the wearers were allowed to choose for themselves. The size of rank badges reduced over the centuries and for that and other reasons, it seems likely that those which comprise this new gift were made in the later years of the Qing dynasty. The social role of rank badges ceased when the Qing dynasty ended in 1911, but removed from their original context, they remained of appeal to textile collectors for their beauty and interest, and the skill shown in their making. Moira White is curator humanities at Tūhura Otago Museum.

Plane with 49 people crashes over Russia's Far East
Plane with 49 people crashes over Russia's Far East

1News

time3 days ago

  • 1News

Plane with 49 people crashes over Russia's Far East

The wreckage of a plane that crashed while carrying 49 people has been found in Russia's Far East, local emergency services said today. Russia's Emergency Situations Ministry said that they had found the plane's 'burning fuselage' but did not provide further details. Forty-three passengers, including five children, as well as six crew members were on board the An-24 passenger plane as it travelled from the city of Blagoveshchensk on the Russian-Chinese border to the town of Tynda, regional Governor Vasily Orlov said. The flight, which was operated by the Siberia-based Angara Airlines, disappeared from radar and lost contact with air traffic controllers several kilometres from Tynda airport.

Six students drown after falling into slurry-filled tank on field trip
Six students drown after falling into slurry-filled tank on field trip

NZ Herald

time3 days ago

  • NZ Herald

Six students drown after falling into slurry-filled tank on field trip

The accident occurred at an ore processing plant in northern China. Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech. The accident occurred at an ore processing plant in northern China. Six university students drowned on Wednesday after they fell into a tank while on a field trip to an ore processing plant in northern China, Chinese state media reported. The students, who were majoring in mineral processing engineering at Northeastern University in Shenyang, were on a field trip to Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region of China, when the grid plate they were standing on collapsed as they were observing a flotation cell, according to state media. Flotation is a stage in the mining process used to concentrate the minerals. Finely ground minerals are mixed with water in a container called a flotation cell to produce a 'metallurgical pulp' that helps sort the valuable from the unneeded materials. The students fell into the flotation cell, which looks like a large container, about 10.20am. Rescuers scrambled to retrieve them, but the students were pronounced dead. A teacher was also injured in the incident.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store