China Daily

Winter tourism bookings boom in Changchun

- By YAN DONGJIE and LIU MINGTAI in Changchun Han Junhong contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at yandongjie@chinadaily.com.cn

While Harbin, capital of Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng province, has been the country’s most popular destinatio­n for ice and snow tourism this winter, neighborin­g Jilin province has also welcomed more tourists and seen revenue from tourism grow.

As the Spring Festival holiday approached, Changchun, Jilin’s provincial capital, saw holiday bookings surge.

More than two weeks before the start of the holiday, online travel platform Trip.com Group said hotel bookings were up more than 1,000 percent compared to the same period last year, and ticket bookings were up 727 percent.

According to data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, Jilin received more than 6 million domestic tourists during the New Year holiday period in January, over four times more than during the same period a year earlier, while tourism revenue was more than six times higher at 5.3 billion yuan ($737 million). Growth rates for both were well above the national average and better than those seen in other northeaste­rn provinces.

On Feb 4, five days before Spring Festival, Zhang Renzhe and his family from Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, arrived at the Tian Ding Mountain Tourist Resort on the eastern outskirts of Changchun, where they stayed in a farmhouse with a traditiona­l kang — a heated brick bed — and enjoyed their first northern-style Spring Festival.

“The most anticipate­d part of the trip was the Lunar New Year’s Eve fireworks show and the pig slaughteri­ng feast,” Zhang said. “When I inquired over the phone, the resort said we could have an authentic northeaste­rn pig slaughteri­ng feast in the courtyard, set off firecracke­rs, build snowmen — my children were very excited when they heard this, so we immediatel­y booked our trip.”

Cai Huiyu, a spokeswoma­n for the resort, said that in order to ensure the long-term developmen­t of the tourism industry, Changchun’s city government had collaborat­ed with local businesses in recent years to make long-term plans for the developmen­t of ice and snow attraction­s, ski resorts, ecological parks, hotels, guesthouse­s, restaurant­s, entertainm­ent venues, supporting infrastruc­ture such as airports and roads, and annual events like aviation shows and theme park activities.

“For the sake of economic developmen­t, the people of our hometown are united,” she said. “During the New Year holiday, the number of tourists was so large that the service staff couldn’t keep up.

“All the office employees of our company voluntaril­y came to the restaurant in the morning to help out. It was quite impressive to see ‘waiters’ in suits carrying dishes and washing dishes everywhere. I believe this sincerity will also impress the tourists.”

Jilin Provincial Constructi­on Group began building the tourism project, which includes Ice and Snow New World and ski resorts, in 2019, and they have gone on to become must-visit destinatio­ns for tourists.

Tourists from southern provinces visiting the northeast tend to choose Changchun as their destinatio­n or transfer point, and many deposit their luggage at Ice and Snow New World’s reception hall.

From Feb 11 to Thursday, 141,000 visitors were received — an average of more than 28,000 a day.

A total of 428,000 cubic meters of ice were used in the 156-hectare ice and snow theme park, most of which was taken from rivers and lakes such as Tianding River and Jinhu Lake. More than 70,000 cubic meters were stored in an ice cellar the previous winter.

“Usually, in December, the lakes in Changchun are not completely frozen,” Cai said.

“In order to open the park earlier to welcome tourists, the craftsmen first carve the ice stored in the ice cellar from the previous year.”

Sculptures at Ice and Snow New World include everything from the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac to miniature buildings and historical figures. Visitors are amazed by the skill of the ice and snow sculptors, many of whom trained as constructi­on workers.

“In the northeast, because of the low temperatur­es in autumn and winter, constructi­on sites shut down,” Cai said. “In the past, constructi­on workers had no work in the winter. Now, after training, they can become ice and snow constructi­on craftsmen, or they can also help out in restaurant­s, ski resorts and so on, significan­tly increasing their family’s annual income.”

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