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Property rights of urban underground space in China: A public good perspective
Affiliation:1. School of Public Administration, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), 430074 China;2. Natural Resources and Law Evaluation Key Laboratory, Wuhan, China;3. Department of Geography and Earth Sciences, Center for Applied GIScience, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, United States;1. Enprodes Management Consultancy BV, Heemraadssingel 245, 3023 CD Rotterdam, The Netherlands;2. Amberg Engineering AG, Trockenloostr. 21, CH-8105 Regensdorf-Watt, Switzerland;1. Rock Engineer Research Foundation (BeFo), Sweden;2. Swedish Rock Construction Committee (BK), Sweden
Abstract:With the booming development of urban underground space in China, “fuzzy” property rights of this special form of land use type are not only the cause of ownership disputation and registration chaos, but also may seriously delay the undertaking of related underground land laws or regulations. China's emerging property rights issue of urban underground space, especially the delimitation of the surface and ground or underground, is facing such a challenge. This article aims to identify the property rights of urban underground space by using a practical method that classifies the underground space as economic goods, and to analyze attributes of different property rights of urban underground space within the theoretical framework of public goods. We use civil defense projects and underground parking lots as case studies. Both case studies are the most utilized types and controversial ownership cases of urban underground space in present China. Our case studies indicate that it is a feasible method to avoid the delimitation of the start-stop height of 3D property right vertically, and directly define the attributes of surface and underground property rights in line with the supply mode of goods. Our results show that the method proposed in this study can effectively solve the dispute of property rights against problems rising with unclear contract and lags in the legislation of urban underground space and clearly delimited the interests boundaries among different parties of property rights for urban underground space. Ultimately, this study may offer better insight into the utilization and registration work of urban underground space in China as well as reference for countries with similar property rights issues.
Keywords:Urban underground space  Property rights  Public goods  Land use rights
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