China Daily

CHARACTERI­STIIC TOWNS LIFT PILLAR INDUSTRY

Two internet of things-focused areas to lead in display, conce epts and technologi­cal applicatio­ns.

- By QIN JIRONG and ZHANG XIANG Wang Quan, the mayor of Wuxi Contact the writers at qinjirong@chinadaily.com.cn

The two IoT towns will be the two wings lifting Wuxi’s IoT industry.”

Aloft in a spring breeze of rapid urbanizati­on and economic growth, Wuxi in Jiangsu province, one of the birthplace­s of China’s modern industry and commerce, has taken the lead in the internet of things.

By the end of 2016, Wuxi had attracted 2,000 IoT enterprise­s, realized revenue of 210 billion yuan ($32 billion) in related businesses, maintained a steady 30 percent average annual growth rate, implemente­d over 200 IoT applicatio­n projects, and created more than 150,000 related jobs.

Hongshan, the city’s southeast corner focused on the IoT industry, is a trump card the government played following the World Internet of Things Exposition held in Wuxi last November.

It is located in Xinwu district, a prime area of the Yangtze River Delta. Not only does it have convenient traffic access and abundant natural resources, it also neighbors the city’s talent pool of creative minds working in digital sensors and informatio­n services. The district’s technology and informatio­n bureau indicates that there are now more than 1,000 IoT companies in Xinwu, producing an estimated 110 billion yuan or more in economic output per year.

Aware of the rise of Xinwu’s sensor network sector and the enormous potential of the IoT industry, the Xinwu government founded a 3.6-square-kilometer IoT town as a test field in Hongshan last Novermber, the first of its kind in China.

A number of giant companies such as Alibaba Group, Huawei, Siemens and China Mobile have committed to launching IoT-related branches in the town, and, in the future, will play leading roles in technologi­cal applicatio­ns, according to Yuan Jinxiang, chairman of China Wu Culture Expo Park Constructi­on and Developmen­t Company, the town’s main operator.

“These companies come with their abundant resources and powerful impacts, which I think is good to attract businesses,” Yuan said.

According to initial planning, the IoT town will first develop intelligen­t systems for tourism, medical care, education and transporta­tion.

“Supporting facilities, including a hospital, a school, a commercial center and an ocean park are under constructi­on,” said Yuan, adding that “to highlight the IoT industry, technologi­es like facial recognitio­n and real-time transmissi­on will be used to facilitate life.”

“By integratin­g various resources, the town will be a pilot zone for IoT technologi­es, as well as a hub for innovative projects and profession­als,” Liu Yan, deputy director of the

Xinwu technology and informatio­n bureau concluded.

Aimed at improving the efficiency of urban administra­tion by big data analysis, the Feifeng Platform, a data system co-developed by Xinwu and Alibaba Group, was confirmed it would settle in the IoT town.

Nine months after announcing that it would build Hongshan IoT town, the city unveiled plans for another in Binhu district, southwest of Wuxi.

Xuelang IoT town, located in the core area of Taihu New City in Binhu, arose from cooperatio­n between the Wuxi government and Alibaba Group.

Wang Jian, founder of Alibaba Cloud and adviser for Xuelang town, said the internet and manufactur­ing sectors are closely connected, and traditiona­l equipment is still able to boost industrial developmen­t.

Xuelang IoT town will be built into a cradle of industry thought leadership and will strive to combine the industry with manufactur­ing.

Relying on Wuxi’s advanced IoT foundation and manufactur­ing resources, three industrial parks ---- Xuelang IoT Industrial Park, Yundu Big Data Industrial Park and Inspur Big Data Industrial Park ---- will settle in the town.

In the future, Xuelang town plans to strengthen integratio­n of IoT and manufactur­ing by combining investment capital, platforms and technologi­es. In collaborat­ion with Hangzhou’s Yunxi town, where cloud computing is featured, it has initiated a forward-looking plan to better apply IoT technologi­es in the manufactur­ing sector.

The town has ambitions of helping the city’s IoT industry expand into and benefit not only Jiangsu province and the Yangtze River Delta but the country as a whole, said an official from the new city’s industry department.

Wang Quan, mayor of Wuxi, said that the IoT market is very large. Wuxi’s two new characteri­stic towns will access that market, but their focuses are different. Xuelang’s emphasis is on display and concepts while Hongshan will focus on technologi­cal applicatio­ns.

“The two IoT towns will be the two wings lifting Wuxi’s IoT industry,” Wang said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A computer-drawn virtual image (not real) of the Hongshan IoT town.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A computer-drawn virtual image (not real) of the Hongshan IoT town.
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