Yes.
It is a typical image of a shanty town, with dense houses and narrow roads. The residents of shantytowns often have poor economic conditions. The huts they build are barely big enough to live in, and the building materials are not fireproof. However, burning fires for cooking is an unavoidable daily activity. Once a fire breaks out, the house may burn quickly. If it cannot be extinguished in time, it will quickly spread and burn down large areas of the house. A more serious problem is the lack of transportation, which makes it difficult for fire trucks to approach in the event of a fire.
Household areas generally refer to areas where simple houses and shantytowns are concentrated. The lack of planning in the city results in a disorderly distribution of houses, too many inclined roads, dead ends, and arc roads, simple structures, and poor disaster resistance, that is, earthquake resistance, Places with poor fire protection and flood prevention, crowded housing, poor functions, poor living environment, no roads, no greening, no public activity venues, and a concentration of houses with poor lighting and ventilation.