China Daily (Hong Kong)

Former Beijing market transforms into a high-tech incubator

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BEIJING — Gu Xiaozheng, founder of a drone developmen­t startup, has just moved his office from Zhongguanc­un, known as Beijing’s “Silicon Valley,” into an office building near the Beijing Zoo.

The building was formerly wellknown to Beijing residents as a garment market, one of 12 shopping malls within the Beijing Zoo Wholesale Market, which was the largest garment distributi­on center in north China until it was closed and cleared out in 2017.

The building has been renamed Baolan Finance and Innovation Center and contains 11,000 square meters of office space. Gu’s firm, which develops industrial-use drones, was among the first group of nine tenants that have moved in.

“The office is more spacious than the one I rented in Zhongguanc­un, and more importantl­y, the location is much more convenient and less crowded,” he said.

Among the other tenants are six tech firms, an internet company and a national incubator “Wework,” which provides shared workspaces for startups and freelancer­s.

Li Ran, manager of the Baolan center, said the Zhongguanc­un Xicheng Science Park helped select firms with high developmen­t potential to enter Baolan.

After garment sellers moved out, a total area of 350,000 sq m has been cleared for office space.

Sun Shuo, executive deputy chief of Beijing’s Xicheng district, said that in addition to Baolan, further office space is currently being planned. Future tenants have to meet the area’s developmen­t orientatio­n as a finance, science, service and cultural center.

“The wholesale market was closed under Beijing’s developmen­t strategy to relocate non-capital functions. The city is aiming to achieve quality developmen­t,” he said.

The “Zoo Market” was built in the mid-1980s for wholesale garment sales, from cheap knock-offs to brand names. Business remained robust, attracting more than 100,000 customers daily over the past decades.

Across the Second Ring Road is Beijing Zoo, one of the city’s top tourist attraction­s, which receives up to 100,000 visitors daily.

“Heavy traffic congestion and high fire risks had plagued the market for many years,” said Li Yunwei, an official with Xicheng district.

Plans to close the Zoo Market in order to “reduce traffic congestion and population density” were announced in 2015.

Li Xiusheng, 43, was among the 40,000 people who were involved with the former market, which had around 12,000 shops. In 2017, Li moved his business to a shopping mall in Yanjiao district, Hebei Province, some 30 km east of central Beijing. Yanjiao borders Beijing’s Tongzhou district and is home to more than 200,000 people who work in the capital.

“Many garment sellers moved further away to the cities of Baigou and Cangzhou in Hebei or to Tianjin Municipali­ty. But I wanted my business to be as close to Beijing as possible, so I settled here,” he said.

Li moved to the capital from Central China’s Henan province at the age of 20 with only 20 yuan ($3) in his pocket. “In 1995, my wife asked me to try my luck selling clothes on the street near the Beijing Zoo, where a large group of vendors had their stalls,” he said.

In 2006, Li and many other vendors moved into a newly built shopping mall in the sprawling wholesale market, which became a goldfield for the garment traders, until November 2017, when the market was officially closed.

Most of the 3,000 shops in Yanjiao’s Dongcheng Shopping Mall, where Li has moved to, are held by former vendors at the Zoo Market.

For some garment traders, moving their businesses to Yanjiao has lowered their costs, as the housing and shop rental prices are much cheaper than those in Beijing.

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