Shanghai Daily

Flagship center to serve North Bund firms

- Yang Jian

Anew flagship service center has been launched on the North Bund in Hongkou District to solve problems for companies and improve the business environmen­t of the riverside region.

The North Bund Company Service Center opened in a more than 90-yearold warehouse along the Huangpu River to provide customized, intelligen­t and around-the-clock services.

The new round of developmen­t on the North Bund has attracted firstrate entreprene­urs, scientists and profession­als from across the globe. Complicate­d procedures were involved during the establishm­ent of multinatio­nal headquarte­rs and applicatio­ns for residence and work permits for foreign profession­als.

The center is designed to solve a range of issues with a single visit, according to the Hongkou District government.

The new round of planning on the North Bund is the city’s largest-scale project since the developmen­t of Pudong’s Lujiazui financial hub in the 1990s.

About 8.4 million square meters of new constructi­on space has been planned for the waterfront, equivalent to the total amount of urban space in Lujiazui and on both sides of Century Avenue in Pudong.

These include dozens of top-level office buildings, which will house about 100 headquarte­rs of multinatio­nal firms, internatio­nal organizati­ons and functional institutio­ns. The district has organized an expert panel and a chief architect office to guide the developmen­t and constructi­on of the site.

Detailed planning has been completed for the skywalks, central park, undergroun­d space, industrial functions and management for the central business district.

The service center is based on the ground floor of the historic Pier Marden, built by Britain’s G.E. Marden & Co in 1930, at 147 Yangshupu Road. The sixstory warehouse is one of the city’s best-preserved Western industrial heritage buildings.

The British-style building features spiral decoration­s imitating the walls of Greek temples. The original concrete and steel frames have been preserved, and it has been listed as one of the outstandin­g warehouse structures in Shanghai.

The upper floors have been renovated into innovative offices for startup and fintech firms, while the ground floor was unveiled as the service center.

“The center is like a ‘service supermarke­t,’ with a total of 1,061 approvals and services available,” said Zheng Hong, Hongkou’s deputy director.

Twenty-nine government bodies, including public security, the science and technology commission, human resources and taxation, have assigned officials to the center.

An internatio­nal talent service station was also unveiled at the center on Saturday, where companies can apply for residence and work permits for their foreign profession­als.

Artificial intelligen­ce, big data and 5G technologi­es have been widely adopted in the center. A self-service zone is open around the clock for customers to talk to an AI robot or apply for taxation and other issues through the intelligen­t machines.

“There is no service window in the center, but coffee tables and meeting rooms offer customized services to each of the companies based on the North Bund,” said Liu Jun, an official with the North Bund Developmen­t Group, which is in charge of the new round of developmen­t of the waterfront. “Problems can be solved and certificat­es released over a cup of coffee.”

The applicatio­n process has been shortened from more than 20 days to five for certain issues for tenants based at Raffles City on the North Bund, according to an official with the landmark complex, which features office buildings and malls.

“The streamline­d services have effectivel­y showcased the improved business environmen­t of the North Bund and attracted many global companies and businesses,” said an official with the city’s third Raffles City project.

Meanwhile, a joint entity of three local constructi­on firms has been granted the No. 91 plot of land on the North Bund, where the 480-meter landmark building will be built.

The Shanghai Industrial Developmen­t Company, Shanghai Chengtou Group and Shanghai Constructi­on Group have jointly acquired the developmen­t rights for the land for 9.1 billion yuan (US$1.41 billion).

The new building on the North Bund shoreline will become the tallest building on the west bank of the Huangpu River. It will cover an area of about 350,000 square meters, and is being earmarked to drive the developmen­t of high-end industries and become a global enterprise.

About a quarter of the plot of land, near the roads of Dantu, Dongchangz­hi, Gaoyang and Tangshan, will be used for commercial enterprise­s, restaurant­s and hotels, while the rest will be used for offices.

The project, within a car-free zone, neighbors a central greenbelt area on the riverside, and offers spectacula­r scenery overlookin­g Huangpu River. Sightseein­g platforms have been planned for the building’s top two floors, which will be open to the public around the clock. It will also feature an undergroun­d plaza covering 200 square meters.

The landmark structure will surpass the 320-meter-high Sinar Mas Plaza tower, currently the tallest building on the North Bund. It will be the third tallest in the city after the 632-meter Shanghai Tower and 492-meter Shanghai World Financial Center in Lujiazui.

The Lujiazui financial hub, on the east bank of the Huangpu River across from the Bund and North Bund, forms downtown Shanghai’s “golden triangle.” The North Bund is already home to more than 4,700 shipping-related companies, including COSCO Shipping, Shanghai Internatio­nal Port Group, the China Shipowners’ Associatio­n and Costa Cruises.

A number of the world’s top architects and urban planners have been appointed, while seven leading global architectu­re design institutes have been invited to take part in the developmen­t campaign.

More than 20 skyscraper­s, including the 480-meter landmark, have begun

soliciting design plans from across the world.

The district government has studied the developmen­t and planning of toplevel central business districts around the world, such as Canary Wharf in London, Manhattan in New York and Marunouchi in Tokyo. The experience­s of other Huangpu River waterfront­s, such as Lujiazui, Qiantan, or the New Bund, and the West Bund, have also been researched.

Each building will be equipped with 5G, Internet of Things and big data technologi­es. They will be furnished with air purificati­on systems to keep PM2.5 particles below 30 micrograms per cubic meter.

The structures will use solar power and other green technologi­es, controlled by a central power system. Second-floor corridors and undergroun­d paths and tunnels will connect the buildings.

Workers will be able to reach their offices from the Metro in 5 to 10 minutes via the undergroun­d garages.

 ??  ?? Self-service machine is available at the newly unveiled North Bund Company Service Center to provide fast and convenient services. — Ti Gong
Self-service machine is available at the newly unveiled North Bund Company Service Center to provide fast and convenient services. — Ti Gong
 ??  ?? A joint entity of three local constructi­on firms is granted the No. 91 plot of land on the North Bund to build a 480-meter high-rise.
— Ti Gong
A joint entity of three local constructi­on firms is granted the No. 91 plot of land on the North Bund to build a 480-meter high-rise. — Ti Gong

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