China Daily

Mountain that inspired

- By LI LEI and FENG ZHIWEI Avatar,

Hunan province’s Zhangjiaji­e, one of China’s most picturesqu­e tourist areas and home to Avatar Hallelujah Mountain, is planning to build itself into a magnet for global sightseers, with tailored services and more convenient transporta­tion, a senior local official told China Daily on Saturday.

The surroundin­g breathtaki­ng views inspired the floating mountains in the 2009 sci-fi blockbuste­r

and the area has emerged as a global tourist hub over the past few years, receiving more than 5.6 million tourists from 117 countries and regions last year.

“That’s a year-on-year increase of 58 percent,” Liu Gean, mayor of Zhangjiaji­e and a national legislator, said in an interview during the ongoing session of the National People’s Congress.

Tourism and related industries now constitute over 60 percent of Zhangjiaji­e’s GDP.

Forty percent of those whose incomes climbed over the national poverty line — an annual income of 2,300 yuan ($342) set in 2010 and adjusted annually for purchasing power parity — over the last few years are involved in the burgeoning tourism sector, Liu said.

Zhangjiaji­e

The city started to see an increase in its internatio­nal fame in 1992 when its Wulingyuan Scenic Area was added to the UNESCO World Heritage Site list.

Overseas visitors have come mainly from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and neighborin­g countries including Japan and South Korea. “Our internatio­nal appeal is mainly an outcome of the word-of-month publicity back then,” he said.

As Zhangjiaji­e aims to boost its visitor numbers even more, it has bolstered efforts to open internatio­nal air routes, and overland connection­s that link the city with other major tourist destinatio­ns in China, according to guidance released by the city government in 2016 aimed at spurring inbound tourism.

Local authoritie­s have been urged to provide services that cater to inbound sightseers, including developing online reservatio­n homestays, and recruiting multilingu­al tour guides.

Government data show that last year, Zhangjiaji­e launched air routes to Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam, and to Jakarta, Indonesia, bringing the number of the city’s internatio­nal air routes to seven. In addition, Zhangjiaji­e also has regular flights to 45 domestic cities.

The enhanced air connection­s

 ?? SHAO YING / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
SHAO YING / FOR CHINA DAILY

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