What's the difference between reconstruction and demolition of villages in cities?
1. The compensation situation is different. Shantytowns literally mean bungalows in cities, with high housing density and inconvenient transportation. Due to the living conditions, the surrounding environment is relatively poor and the housing cycle is long. Because its land is state-owned land, it is difficult to build, and it is generally difficult to move out of the original residence after the shed is changed and demolished. Villages in cities, in urban rural areas, are mostly due to the urbanization of urban suburbs. However, the area has not been substantially developed and gradually evolved into a village in the city;
2. Different property rights. The most obvious difference between demolition and urban village reconstruction is that the land is still collective land, but because it is better than the general rural location, the market price at the time of compensation is the same as that around it. After the demolition, resettlement houses are generally built at the original address.
Legal basis: Article 8 of the Regulations on Expropriation and Compensation of Houses on State-owned Land.
In order to protect national security, promote national economic and social development and other public interests, in any of the following circumstances, it is really necessary to levy houses, and the people's governments at the city and county levels shall make a decision on house expropriation:
(a) the needs of national defense and diplomacy;
(two) the needs of the government organization and implementation of energy, transportation, water conservancy and other infrastructure construction;
(three) the needs of public utilities such as science and technology, education, culture, health, sports, environmental and resource protection, disaster prevention and mitigation, cultural relics protection, social welfare, and municipal utilities organized and implemented by the government;
(four) the needs of the construction of affordable housing projects organized and implemented by the government;
(five) the needs of the old city reconstruction organized and implemented by the government according to the relevant provisions of the Urban and Rural Planning Law;
(six) the needs of other public interests as prescribed by laws and administrative regulations.