China Daily

Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei coordinate tourism developmen­t

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TIANJIN — During the Spring Festival holiday, tourists tried their hands at making Lunar New Year woodblock prints at a folk culture center in Yangliuqin­g township in Tianjin municipali­ty.

“Many tourists have a natural affinity for Yangliuqin­g woodblock prints. I’ve heard many visitors from Beijing and Hebei say that their families had the tradition of putting up prints when they were little,” says Xia Ting, head of the tourism distributi­on center in Tianjin’s Xiqing district.

“Tourists from the Beijing- Tianjin- Hebei region accounted for about 70 percent of the total number of tourists we received last year,” Xia says.

More than 100 million people live in the Beijing- Tianjin- Hebei region, which boasts a wealth of cultural and tourism resources. In 2014, a national strategy proposed the coordinate­d developmen­t of the Beijing- Tianjin- Hebei region, and since then, Beijing, Tianjin and neighborin­g Hebei province have cooperated on boosting cultural and tourism developmen­t.

Gao Cuilian, who owns a farmyard in Changzhou village in Tianjin, is busy treating tourists to freshly cooked dishes. “Rural ecotourism is becoming more popular among urban tourists from Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei, and my business is doing very well,” she says.

Data from the China Tourism Academy shows that Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei were among each other’s top sources of tourists in 2023. Among the tourists received by Tianjin, those from Hebei and Beijing hold the top two rankings, accounting for 49.1 percent of the total number of tourists from outside of Tianjin. Hebei and Beijing were the top two destinatio­ns for tourists from Tianjin, and they made up 52.7 percent of the total out- of- town trips made by Tianjin tourists.

Since 2014, Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei have signed agreements on culture, performing arts, protection of the Great Wall and personnel exchanges to promote the integrated developmen­t of the cultural and tourism market in the region.

The three regions have also developed high- quality cultural tourism products and brands, and have hold tourism developmen­t forums, intangible cultural heritage exhibition­s and tourism promotions to enhance the coordinate­d developmen­t of tourism in the region.

“We planned Beijing- TianjinHeb­ei winter- tour theme routes for Spring Festival so tourists from the region can enjoy folk customs, lantern shows, winter sports and comfortabl­e hot springs, and celebrate Spring Festival together,” says Chen Bing, deputy head of the Tianjin Bureau of Culture and Tourism.

“The culture and tourism industries of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei have a good foundation for coordinate­d developmen­t. They are capable of becoming a tourism community of mutual resources and coordinate­d developmen­t,” says Xu Hong, dean of the College of Tourism and Service Management of Nankai University.

“In the future, Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei should give full play to the comparativ­e advantages of their tourism industries, break down the barriers to the flow of tourism elements, and improve the quality of coordinate­d developmen­t of tourism in the region,” Xu says.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ZHAO ZISHUO / XINHUA ?? Right: An aerial view of the meeting point between the three regions.
PHOTOS BY ZHAO ZISHUO / XINHUA Right: An aerial view of the meeting point between the three regions.
 ?? ?? Left: A panoramic view by drone captures two visitors at the border of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province.
Left: A panoramic view by drone captures two visitors at the border of Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province.

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