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Extremely rare chrome green Lamborghini spotted in Shenzhen

Posted: 11/4/2013 2:40 pm

Think China is land of the supercar? You’re probably right — though this very rare green chrome Lamborghini Gallardo LP570-4 Superleggera, that was spotted in Shenzhen recently, seems to fit into a category all its own.

I dare say this bad boy belongs more in a superhero comic book than real-world China (let alone a Shenzhen parking lot), and just looking at it makes me think the Green Hornet is going to hop out at any moment and kick some punk ass.

For all you car geeks reading this, GTSpirit, who reported the sighting, had this to share:

The LP570 is a lighter and more powerful version of the standard LP560. Using Carbon Fiber and other lightweight materials, the team at Sant’agata managed to strip out an impressive 70kg from the car.

As for the engine, 570bhp is produced at 8,000rpm, with torque curve peaks at 540Nm (398,3ft-lbs) at 6,500rpm. The minimal gain was achieved through careful ECU programming.

Obviously performance figures are important for a car like the Superleggera and it does not disappoint, zero to 100km/h (62mph) can be achieved in just 3.4 seconds, 0 to 200km/h (124mph) in 10.2 seconds and the top speed is 325km/h (202mph).

If that doesn’t whet your appetite, I’m afraid there’s no hope left for you. All I request of all those living in Shenzhen is that if this shiny green vessel of the gods passes you on the street, you stop what you are doing and bow down before it.

And do not stand up until it has turned onto the next street.

Photo credit: GTSpirit

Haohao

Guangzhou tackles traffic congestion, will restrict non-Guangzhou registered vehicles

Posted: 03/22/2013 10:39 am

Guangzhou aims to tackle the city’s worsening traffic problem by introducing a new measure restricting certain vehicles from the road. (Shenzhen, are you listening?)

Under the new rules, vehicles registered outside of Guangzhou proper will be restricted from certain roads, and the downtown core, during certain times of the day. The speculation is rush hour traffic will be limited, for example. But as Guangzhou Daily reports, the times and locations for the restrictions haven’t been decided yet.

The new restrictions will throw a wrench into many people’s morning commute. As everybody knows, the PRD is a vast urbanized area, and not everybody who works in Guangzhou lives in Guangzhou. There are thousands of people who live in nearby Foshan, for instance, and make the daily commute.  One person the paper talked to, Mr. Guo, said he may have to buy a car in Guangzhou and register it there if he wants to continue driving to work. Otherwise he’ll have to take the bus and transfer to the metro, meaning waking up quite a bit earlier each morning.

On the bright side, though, the moves show the government is trying to unclog the city’s main arteries.  We’ll see if this is effective.

Haohao

Sporty and fun the theme of this year’s Guangzhou Auto Show

Posted: 12/5/2012 5:50 pm

This season’s Guangzhou Autoshow reflected the changing interests of both the manufacturers and consumers. Along with the ritual worshipping of the models by the amateur photographers and the obligatory “I’m louder than you” dance shows among competing manufacturers, there were some distinct trends in the show, which wrapped up on Sunday.

As I’ve attended the GZ Autoshow for the past few years, my attention was immediately grabbed by the onslaught of sports cars, off-road vehicles, recreational vehicles, and luxury cars. There were many more of these compared to previous years. Regardless of the brand or size of the display, spectators flocked to anything sporty or fun. “Bigger and faster” stood out among all else this year.

Off-road vehicles also took the main stage for many manufacturers. Mitsubishi, Toyota and others all took great pains to grab attention for their new, stronger and more powerful models.

Also vying for attention was Mercedes Benz. With two very large factory booths (vans and passenger vehicles) and no less than five aftermarket custom coach builders using only Mercedes’ chassis, it MB was present on every floor and building in the show.

Other interesting new items to the show?

Honda brought 3 motorcycles that it hopes to introduce to into the Chinese market, there was a Lexus / Red Bull F1 car, numerous racing and rally cars, a large presence of used car sellers (notably luxury used cars), and more.

Green technology was present as always, but was not as prominent as it has been before. A few concept cars sported “hybrid” or “electric” badges, but there seemed to be little interest as there were few breakthrough technologies, hence fewer cool toys to show.

I noticed much smaller displays from the import car makers than last year’s December show. Smart Car, Audi, Cadillac, Porsche, Lamborghini, Honda, are just a few who still hard large and exotic displays, but were smaller than last year’s.  In contrast, the Chinese manufacturers seemed to have expanded their lines greatly. However, as I mentioned, any brands without fun, sporty, recreational vehicles had relatively few onlookers… hot models or not.

The displays and manufacturers showcasing simple, economic, or economy cars were virtually ignored, where as last year, price and mileage figures were proudly and loudly displayed.

This Autoshow shows no limit to the enthusiasm of manufacturers, despite projections of inflation and a shrinking GDP, feeding Chinese consumers more of what they think they want: speed, power, luxury, and most of all, recognition.

Overall, I’d say much more pleasing to the eye…. not so much to the wallet.

Haohao

In Dongguan searching for a job, he got recruited by a gang and lost his older cousin

Posted: 04/10/2012 2:10 pm

Each year the kids come, looking for jobs somewhere in the PRD, usually ending up working in a factory in Dongguan. 16-year-old Jiangxi native Xu Shibin was not that lucky; instead of a proper job he got his arm broken, for effect, and then shipped by his new criminal gang of employers to Shenzhen’s Yantian district where he was made to serve as part of a ‘car crash gang’ (撞车党), setting themselves to get hit by a car (from another car, or sometimes a bike) and then demanding compensation. The fraud continues until the car falls apart or ends up in such rough shape that victims are no longer fooled by the ruse (or the cops get them).

Xu was eventually able to escape the gang, but the whereabouts of his cousin, 18-year-old Xu Laifu, who came to Dongguan with him, remain unknown. Police in Dongguan’s Zhongtang town are now investigating the case.

According to Xu, he and his cousin arrived at Dongguan’s Zhongtang at around 3pm on March 24 to look for work, and were soon approached by a man in black at his fifties who said he could introduce them to a job that paid 10,000 RMB/day.

Not exactly veterans of the job market, the Xus followed the man into a minivan.

The next day they were separated, and the younger Xu taken to Shenzhen, to a rented apartment in Yantian, where two unidentified men gave him some drugged coffee and then asked if wanted to join their car crash gang. When Xu declined, the two men broke his left arm with an iron rod.

The next evening, Xu was dropped off on the side of the road somewhere nearby and told to play along as the gang worked its fraud. He waited until the two men were each distracted on a phone call and then slipped away. After running hundreds of meters down the road with his broken arm, Xu got lucky when a taxi driver stopped and offered to take him to the bus station.

Xu managed to get home to Jiangxi for treatment, and returned to Zhongtang a week later with his relatives in tow, trying to find his elder cousin. They returned to the rented apartment where Xu had his arm broken and, finding that there were people inside, immediately called the police.

Except, without any evidence to charge them with, police set the men free.

Haohao

Guangzhou Ferrari owner drifts straight into a wall

Posted: 03/14/2012 7:22 am

Early morning March 11, a black Ferrari speeding down Yanjiang East Road spun out of control, coming to a stop upside the wall of the tram terminus building beneath Haiyin bridge, in Yuexiu district.

Fortunately for the tram operators, the night shift is lightly staffed, so no one was injured. The wall of the building sustained some minor scratches, but the grill of the Ferrari crumpled, leaving the car more or less totalled.

New Express quotes Luo, the tram office employee on duty at the time of the crash, as saying the Ferrari bounced through a fence before impacting with the building. Luo also told the newspaper this was the first car to meet its end upon his office wall in the 10 years he’s been working there.

A witness to the accident recalls seeing the car’s air bag pop out immediately upon impact, ejecting the driver and saving him from getting stuck inside the wreckage. The witness also said that the driver walked off to find himself some treatment at a nearby hospital.

Costs of repairing the car will reach at least six figures, said a spokesperson for the insurance company involved.

Click for more photos from the crash.

Haohao

Nanfang TV: Road rage, Guangdong style

Posted: 01/3/2012 5:04 pm

We’ve all witnessed road range in some form or another, but this guy takes the cake.

Police tried to stop a vehicle in Meizhou, Guangdong but the driver eluded the check.  The police officer banged on the car with his fists as the car drove off.  Unfortunately for the driver, traffic ahead was heavy, and chaos ensued as he destroyed everything in sight in an effort to escape.

(H/t to Shanghaiist)

Haohao

Shamian to begin restricting traffic this month

Posted: 12/5/2011 10:20 pm

Shamian Island, one of the few truly peaceful oases in Guangzhou, is about to become even more serene.

Liwan District has decided to begin further restricting vehicle traffic on the picturesque island beginning Christmas Eve to make the island more pedestrian friendly, according to the Life of Guangzhou:

The draft announcement posted on the website of the government of Liwan District, in which Shamian Island is located, says cars will be prohibited in Shamian South Street, a section between Shamian 2nd Street and the East Bridge, from 9:30.am to 10.pm on weekends. Furthermore, Shamian 2nd Street will permanently become a one-way street. Drivers will now also require a permit to enter Shamian Main Street, a section east of Shamian 4th Street.

The main parking lots on the island are still open for public use and drivers are still allowed to enter the White Swan Hotel through its approach bridge.

Ahh, that ‘approach bridge’ to the White Swan Hotel. I’d like to know who figured it would be a good idea to build a large concrete overpass for vehicle traffic directly in front of a picturesque seawall.

Still, considering China’s love of the automobile, it’s good to see Liwan take steps to keep some areas largely car-free.

Haohao

Shenzhen beats Beijing to place second on traffic misery index

Posted: 09/19/2011 4:07 pm

Shenzhen is generally considered to be one of the more well-planned, modern cities in China, but you wouldn’t know it from the increasing traffic gridlock that is affecting our city. But is it really worse than Beijing’s notorious traffic snarls? Nanfang Reporter Katei Wang recently translated a story that appeared in the Southern Metropolis Daily that says Shenzhen’s traffic isn’t only worse than the capital’s, it’s among the worst in the world:

IBM Corporation recently published the Global Traffic Misery Index, which measures traffic in different cities all over the world. Beijing and Shenzhen are both on the list. However, people are surprised that Shenzhen outstrips Beijing and other cities, ranking number two on the list behind Mexico City.

Needless to say, the fact Shenzhen’s traffic ranks poorly hasn’t surprised local residents. But the fact it’s rated even worse than Beijing? That has raised a few eyebrows:

“Impossible. Beijing is more congested than Shenzhen.”

“I don’t think this is credible. Based on the data, Shenzhen actually has the highest density of motor vehicles in China, when in fact Beijing is more crowded than Shenzhen.”

“Shenzhen’s traffic is not worse than Beijing’s. People who live in Beijing face half an hour or an hour’s traffic jam which rarely happens in Shenzhen.”

The story says Shenzhen traffic police bureau secretary Liu Fengjun pointed out that Beijing needs two to three hours to ease it’s traffic pressure during the peak in the evening, but Shenzhen just needs less than an hour. Liu said traffic in Shenzhen is “crowded, but controlled”.

So what are the top 5 worst cities in the world for traffic? Without further adieu…

  1. Mexico City

  2. Shenzhen

  3. Beijing

  4. Nairobi

  5. Johannesburg

 

Haohao
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