The best urban layout is "wind gets water". Which cities are examples of taking water from the wind?

What is the layout of the city? Urban layout refers to the structure and level of urban areas and the proportion of various functional land in cities. Urban layout refers to the plane form of urban built-up area, as well as the internal functional structure and the structure and form of road system. Urban layout pattern is formed in the process of historical development, or the result of natural development or planning and construction. They often work alternately. Studying the urban layout model and its advantages and disadvantages is of guiding significance to the formulation of the overall urban planning.

What is its significance? The significance of urban overall layout: it reflects the internal relationship between various land uses, is the strategic deployment of urban construction and development, and is related to the rational organization of urban components and the investment cost of urban construction. Urban planning is a scientific, applied and comprehensive work. Through planning, we can reasonably determine the development direction, scale and layout of the city, make overall arrangements for various constructions, coordinate contradictions in all aspects of construction, and gradually develop into a city with relatively perfect facilities and a clean and beautiful environment.

Many people say that houses need water in the wind. What does this mean? Stop when you meet the boundary water: "There must be a mountain between the two waters. So the water will dry up, the water will stop, the water will fly away and the gas will gather inside. " Looking at the old earth tomb, it is natural to find that there must be a mountain between the two waters, so the two waters will come out at the end of Long Mai (mountain range), so the place where the water potential is scattered (lack of water) will inevitably be angry and scattered, and the place where the water potential meets will inevitably be angry and gather. Therefore, in Feng Shui, anything that can block the wind can be called water, and things with obvious boundaries can also be called water, so Feng Shui regards the roads in cities as water.

What about the water in those houses in the wind? Rivers and lakes belong to real water, and low-lying places also look at water. In fact, cities mainly refer to gas fields, and the place where water meets in Tang Ming is the square in front of the government. The parked car is water, where the gas field gathers, and people are constantly running.