China Daily

Theme park

After Nanchang venture, Hefei project opens, produces property boom

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Wanda takes park fight to Disney, adds Hefei attraction.

In the year 383, during the Jin Dynasty rule, 80,000 soldiers in the town of Feishui successful­ly warded off attackers who outnumbere­d them ten-fold. It has been lauded as one of the most famed underdog victories in Chinese history.

Billionair­e Wang Jianlin is betting on strength in numbers prevailing as he battles modern-day invader Walt Disney Co to become China’s biggest theme-park operator.

The chairman of Wanda Group was in the audience Saturday as dozens of actors in Feishui, now part of the eastern Chinese city of Hefei, attempted to recreate the famous battle 1,633 years later to mark the opening of Hefei Wanda Cultural Tourism City.

Wang has laid out a plan to build 15 multi-billion-dollar theme parks across China by 2020, which he said would be a “pack of wolves” that defeats the one “tiger” of Shanghai Disneyland.

The 160-hectare (395-acre) Hefei Wanda City, located in the eastern province of Anhui, opened a week ahead of China’s week-long golden week holiday that starts Oct 1. It has been four months since the company introduced its first theme park, in Nanchang, southeaste­rn Jiangxi province. Both cities are within a four-hour train ride of Shanghai.

The Hefei park, comprising an outdoor entertainm­ent facility, a shopping mall, a movie complex and an indoor water park, is Wanda’s latest attempt to diversify from its real estate roots and build a culture-and-entertainm­ent empire that it hopes will overshadow Walt Disney.

On Saturday, Wang announced that Wanda will splash out another 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) on indoor entertainm­ent facilities in the Hefei park, to be completed in two to three years.

“Wanda is determined to make Hefei Wanda City a world-class tourism attraction, making Hefei a world-class tourism destinatio­n,” Wang told a roomful of local officials and reporters at the opening ceremony. The conglomera­te is building eight other “Wanda Cities” in the country.

Guarded by tight security, local officials and foreign ambassador­s were shown around the 24 billionyua­n developmen­t on Saturday morning, before the park opened to the public at 12.18 pm, an auspicious time for wealth and fortune, according to Chinese numerology. When including the residentia­l project nearby, the cost of the project rises to 35 billion yuan, according to Wanda.

Highlights of the park include a street display of traditiona­l Chinese craftsmans­hip, a parade conjuring up the Rio Carnival, the world’s tallest looping roller-coaster and China’s first immersive interactiv­e cinema. Admission to the complex costs 388 yuan for a combined daily pass in the peak season, while the outdoor themepark alone costs 248 yuan.

Although cheaper than Shanghai Disneyland, this isn’t a small expenditur­e for local residents. Last year, the GDP per capita in Anhui province was 36,176 yuan, compared with the national average of 52,000 yuan.

“Of course I’d love to take my entire family to go visit sometime, but it’s quite expensive compared to our usual leisure destinatio­ns — the existing aquarium costs just 80 yuan,” said 44-year-old Wei Minggen, a local taxi driver.

The developmen­t can host 20 million visitors a year, according to Wanda. Anhui province’s population was 61 million last year.

While it remains to be seen if tourism traffic can be sustained in the entertainm­ent complex, the concept of an upcoming cultural and tourism hub has produced a property boom in the neighborho­od. Wanda, China’s largest property developer, has poured billions of yuan in building residentia­l apartments.

The Binhu New District, home to a new high-speed train station, the Wanda City and a soon-to-be-completed subway line, is a burgeoning area at the heart of the local government’s urbanizati­on plan.

The average price for secondhand apartments in the area has doubled over the past year to more than 18,000 yuan per square meter, according to Fang.com, an online real-estate agency.

Li Xuan, a local homeowner, bought two apartments at the end oflastyear­at8,000yuanper­square meter.

“I feel pretty happy that I made the investment back then,” he said. “Because now new apartments are so in demand and it’s very difficult to buy one, regardless of how much money you have.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Wang Jianlin (center), chairman of Wanda Group, mingles with the performers at the opening ceremony of the 160-hectare Hefei Wanda City on Saturday in Anhui province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Wang Jianlin (center), chairman of Wanda Group, mingles with the performers at the opening ceremony of the 160-hectare Hefei Wanda City on Saturday in Anhui province.

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