this post was submitted on 04 Aug 2023
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White Elephant

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White Elephant

A white elephant, alternatively referred to as a "boondoggle" or "grands travaux inutiles (GTI)," is a metaphor that represents a (partially) completed structure that is deemed wasteful in terms of both time and finances. Simultaneously, it becomes a liability due to the ongoing expenses associated with its maintenance, operation and commitments.

Instances of white elephants encompass various scenarios, such as the construction of bridges without corresponding road connections, the establishment of railways that remain unused, or the erection of substantial structures like power plants that never become operational.

The metaphor white elephant and why it is used

Wikipedia description of the metaphor: a white elephant is a possession that its owner cannot dispose of, and whose cost, particularly that of maintenance, is out of proportion to its usefulness.

In this context, the metaphor 'white elephant' is used because these extensive (partially) constructed projects demand maintenance, inspections, and similar commitments, making them a persistent source of burden for their owners, despite being (largely) unproductive.

This community

This community is a gathering of white elephant projects. White elephants can be captivating in several aspects:

  1. Their level of "wastefulness" stands in stark contrast to our predominantly organized and planned society;
  2. The stories behind these white elephants can be intriguing;
  3. They can have vast, deserted constructions featuring interesting images and other visual content.

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The Ryugyong Hotel in North Korea's capital, Pyongyang, is an uncompleted hotel. Construction started in 1987 and was halted several times. Most prominently during the colapse of the Soviet Union.

The hotel existed largely in a rough construction state until 2008. From then, a Egyptian construction company, Orascom, re-started construction on the exterior part of the building. By 2011 they had completed the exterior part of the building.

Up until now, only the exterior part of the building is completed. The interior part is largely empty and no works have commenced on the interior part. In recent years, a large LED panel was fitted to one of the sides of the building.

The building is up until now never used as a hotel. Unkown is why the Egyptian construction company never finished the interior.

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