This research is built on my participation in the UW China Village Studio, a field research course in Sichuan, China, led by Prof. Dan Abramson, my mentor. China's rural area is changing rapidly under the Socialist New Countryside Construction policy. In the name of efficiency, implementation of the policy typically ignores existing efficiencies in the landscape and community structure of the Chengdu Plain. Traditional settlement patterns have been suddenly transformed, and farmers are losing their traditional public spaces for exchange of information about cultivation, markets, and maintaining flexible social networks. Ray Oldenburg argues that “third places”, which are social gathering spaces apart from home and workplace, are important for civil society, democracy, civic engagement, and establishing feelings of a sense of place. The Linpan rural agriculture landscape has a unique scattered settlement pattern that has evolved in place for over two thousand years. Its traditional prolific “third places” for local people to relax, enjoy social life, build connections, exchange information, interact with others and build connections are important elements in this landscape. Residents spend much time on these social activities daily, which remain vital in the lives of local people today. New rural construction projects are reducing the number of such places, bringing them closer to government centers, and designing them in more functionally specialized ways, which we fear may reduce residents' choices of where to meet and what to do there, ultimately weakening their social networks and accessibility to information. While my research cannot prove or disprove this hypothesis, I hope to lay a foundation for further research by conducting a literature search on social space, time budgeting and efficiency in Chengdu Plain; analyzing our household and village social and spatial data with GIS to map to the distribution of third places in relation to the houses, the population density, and other service centers. I hope this will be useful in future more comprehensive studies on the social impacts and resilience of these communities.