Shanghai Daily

Yuyuan Road from history to the future

- Bob Yang

displays, art will be shown at Shanghai Shipyard, one of the city’s oldest shipyards, and a textile warehouse, as part of the two-month event.

The shipyard in the area is over 200 meters long, and will become a major exhibition space for the city.

The shipyard was establishe­d in 1900 by a German company to build shallow-water vessels, tow boats, ferries and cruise ships. The site became one of the largest shipyards in China in the 1930s and was named Shanghai Shipyard in 1985.

China’s icebreaker, Xuelong, was upgraded at the shipyard in November 2007.

The nearby Maoma Warehouse will open as the main indoor exhibition space. The warehouse was built in 1920 by a British textile company. It was later purchased by the state-owned Shenxin Textile Factory No. 7 and witnessed the rise and fall of the nation’s textile industry.

Since the first show in 2015, Shanghai’s urban space art seasons have been held at former industrial sites, including a renovated aircraft hanger and an old grain silo that was once the largest in Asia.

The exhibition will be free between 2pm and 8pm Tuesday to Friday and 10am to 8pm on weekends and holidays, through November 30. Rservation is required on the event’s official WeChat account. THE city’s century-old Yuyuan Road and its surroundin­g area are to be transforme­d by two urban renewal projects.

The former Printemps Department Store on Dingxi Road, which closed in April, will become a high-tech complex featuring artificial intelligen­ce companies, exhibition­s and applicatio­ns.

In the other project, the former dormitory buildings of the Shanghai Workers College of Medical Science will be preserved and house innovative stores, small restaurant­s and art exhibition­s.

The state-owned Joinval Trade Group signed a strategic agreement with a joint venture establishe­d by the Shanghai Institute of Microsyste­m and Informatio­n Technology, and Creater Industrial Co, the firm in charge of revamping the area, to redevelop the former shopping mall.

Yuyuan Road — which dates back to 1911 — runs through the districts of Changning and Jing’an. In recent decades it has been shortened to its current 800 meters.

It features well-preserved historical villas once home to big names such as missile and space scientist Qian Xuesen, writer, translator and scholar Shi Zhecun and New Zealandbor­n writer Rewi Alley, who came to Shanghai in 1927 and was later involved in China’s revolution and reconstruc­tion.

The future high-tech complex, named “AI engine,” will gather top AI companies and startups on Dingxi Road, off Yuyuan Road. The area will become the eastern hub of the Hongqiao Intelligen­t Valley, a key technology base planned by the Changning government.

The Changning branch of the Printemps Department Store opened in 2004 and was once a popular shopping destinatio­n. But in the face of online shopping, it shut on April 15 after its lease expired.

In the other project, the Yu Jian complex developed from decrepit dormitorie­s of the former college are expected to become a new attraction on Yuyuan Road.

As part of the project, the Yuyuan Public Market has opened where residents can buy traditiona­l Shanghai breakfast foods such as youtiao (fried dough stick), dabing (flat bread) and soybean milk as well as get keys cut or broken umbrellas fixed. Four nearby buildings will be renovated for retail and cultural exhibition­s.

 ??  ?? The historic Shanghai Shipyard on Yangpu waterfront will host the Shanghai Urban Space Art Season 2019. — Ti Gong
The historic Shanghai Shipyard on Yangpu waterfront will host the Shanghai Urban Space Art Season 2019. — Ti Gong

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