Shanghai Daily

Dream project for former industrial satellite city

- Yang Yang

Laominhang, literally meaning “old Minhang,” is a satellite city of Shanghai with a history going back seven decades. It roughly covers the region that is the now Jiangchuan Road subdistric­t of Minhang District. It is being redevelope­d as a modern and vibrant riverfront urban area with its backbone urban landscape of the new Metro Line 23, Minhang’s Huangpu River section and waterways and roads of its Grand NeoBay Sci-tech Innovation Zone.

Among the first batch of industrial satellite cities in China built in the 1950s, the Laominhang area saw countless industrial and urban innovation­s in its pioneering heavy industry years.

Yet as time passed, its urban landscape as well as its functions lagged behind.

A silver lining behind the cloud: the Jiangchuan Road Subdistric­t is taking full advantage of its Grand NeoBay regional developmen­t strategy, and quickly morphing into a modern riverfront urban area.

Cui Hongsheng, 74, lives in its Gaohua residentia­l area and has been a Laominhang resident since his teenage years.

The 60-year-old Lanping Wet Market near his home was renovated recently.

“In its first reopening day, I visited the wet market joyfully as many residents of Laominhang did. I shopped for a fish and did a lucky draw. When I was out, I took photos of the renewed market from different angles,” said Cui.

He has photos of the Lanping Wet

Market in its different stages and after the visit published a story online about the market, an article which struck a chord with many fellow residents.

Cui joined the Shanghai Turbine Factory in 1968 and retired in 2010. He was among hundreds of thousands of factory workers who resettled in Laominhang in the 1950s and 1960s.

Row after row of workers’ residentia­l buildings were characteri­stic of that era, including the Hongqi (Red Flag Limousine Factory), Qilun (Shanghai Turbine Factory) and Dianji (Shanghai Electorica­l Machine Factory) neighborho­ods.

Among the residentia­l complexes, there were 244 non-private apartment buildings with a total floor area over 400,000 square meters. The residents had shared kitchens and bathrooms.

In 2005, the Jiangchuan Road subdistric­t began renovating the non-private apartments to improve housing conditions.

The subdistric­t’s 10 neighborho­ods, including the Gaohua residentia­l area, also took part in a neighborho­od renewal project that helped with housing renovation, public area risk prevention, improved parking, environmen­t upgrading, senior care facility installati­on, lifts installati­on and relocation of outdoor antennas.

“We’ll systemical­ly carry out our urban renewal project in Jiangchuan Road subdistric­t,” said Lin Yi, an official with the subdistric­t’s community committee.

The subdistric­t will take advantage of its Metro Line 23 as well as its Metro Line 5 and push realty developmen­t and land use under the guidance of transit-oriented developmen­t.

About a million square meters of business zones will be formed from former commercial buildings and low-efficient factory buildings.

A former bearing factory will be vacated for the constructi­on of a talent apartment building, headquarte­rs office building, high-end hotel and high-quality commercial complex.

The region’s 6.3-kilometer riverfront will cater to cultural, entertainm­ent and leisure needs for residents in Grand NeoBay, and include culture venues such as the Qiao Zhen Language Museum and South Bund Park.

An essential waterway and Jiangchuan Road, nicknamed Laominhang’s No. 1 road, will be linked with residentia­l areas, schools, parks and greenery, office buildings and various commercial venues.

“We’ll govern the region with joint efforts and build it toward a dream homeland of our residents,” Lin said.

 ?? ?? The Grand NeoBay Sci-tech Innovation Zone has infused fresh momentum into the Laominhang area’s developmen­t. — Ti Gong
The Grand NeoBay Sci-tech Innovation Zone has infused fresh momentum into the Laominhang area’s developmen­t. — Ti Gong

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