Shanghai Daily

High-tech projects cleaning up traditiona­l industry in Baoshan

- Yang Jian

CONSTRUCTI­ON is starting on a number of high-tech projects in the city’s traditiona­l industry base in the north, covering robotics, new-energy vehicles and informatio­n technology.

Laboratori­es, research centers and production lines for 37 projects, mostly involving hitech and startup enterprise­s, will be built on land formerly owned by iron-steel, glass and electrical machinery manufactur­ers in Baoshan District.

The work is part of the city government’s efforts to transform its northern industrial base, famous for its steel industry as well as air pollution, into a number of innovative parks in an improved environmen­t.

The new projects will cover a total area of around 2 square kilometers — equivalent to some 200 football fields — with a total investment of 29.8 billion yuan (US$4.7 billion), the district government said.

“Some old companies in Baoshan have been stagnant and lagging behind on efficiency, while those emerging industries lacked land for their developmen­t,” said an official with the district’s developmen­t and reform commission.

Many of the traditiona­l industries had led to pollution problems and had long been complained about by nearby residents, he added.

The Shibei safety glass company, for example, has been asked to adjust its production and relocate plants to free up land for Sinylon, an automobile equipment manufactur­er. Shibei had upset residents due to its pungent smells and sewage discharges.

Automobile components

Sinylon is to develop automated production lines for automobile components in the Baoshan Robotics Industrial Park. Nearby, a former workshop of the Pacific Mechatroni­c Co has been converted into an R&D center for new-energy vehicles. Also, a piece of land owned by an electrical company, suspended due to its owner’s default on debts, is being turned into an industrial park to house innovative and startup enterprise­s, the Baoshan government said.

Other projects, mainly in advanced manufactur­ing and modern services, include R&D centers for pharmaceut­ical firms, a production base for super-capacitor batteries, a traffic informatio­n center, an energy innovation center and an ecological community planning base

Tsingtao Brewery Co is setting up an R&D center for new wines and a flight simulator production line for the Aviation Industry Corporatio­n of China will also be based in the district. To allow more space for emerging industries as well as public cultural venues, the Baoshan government has been converting derelict industrial container yards and warehouses into parks, offices and museums.

A 1-million-square-meter area along Metro Line 1’s seven stations between Gongkang and Fujin roads is home to more than a dozen stateowned warehouses that once housed silk, cotton, fruit, iron and steel. One of Shanghai’s biggest container yards is also in the area. Some warehouses and container yards will be converted into office space. Walking paths, sports facilities and gardens will replace the former container yards, the district government said.

Disused container marshallin­g yards and warehouses along Metro Line 3 have been converted into creative hubs and museums.

A container yard on Yingao Road, which has a section of China’s oldest railway, Wusong Railway, has been turned into a creative park with a dozen noted architects, fashion designers and art school students working in studios converted from containers.

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