Shanghai Daily

Shanghai to develop additional 20km of waterfront by 2025

- Yang Jian

SHANGHAI plans to create “world-class waterfront spaces” along the Huangpu River and Suzhou Creek by further opening up some 20 kilometers of the riverside by 2025, according to the 14th Five-Year Plan for riverside developmen­t that was released by the city government yesterday.

The plan follows the opening of a downtown Huangpu River section covering a total of 45km on both sides of the river and 42km-long paths along Suzhou Creek.

The riverfront space will be further expanded both to the south and north to the city’s outskirts to benefit more residents, said Zhu Jianhao, vice director of the Shanghai Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t Commission.

The new waterfront areas include a 5km section along the Wusong River in northern Baoshan District, a 7.3km section in Pudong’s Gaoqiao Port and Sanlin, a 3km section south of the Xupu Bridge, the remaining waterfront region in Yangpu District and some riverside space in Minhang District.

According to the blueprint, the Huangpu will feature a golden waterfront showcasing Shanghai’s core urban competitiv­eness and a world-class parlor with global influence.

The creekside will become a “demonstrat­ion of modern life with comfortabl­e living, working, traveling and recreation­al environmen­t.”

Large parks and greenbelts will be built in the riverside regions, while existing public spaces and riverside paths will be improved.

About 4 square kilometers of new parks and green areas, equivalent to over 550 standard football pitches, will be built along the river.

Key projects include the Expo Culture Park within the former site of the 2010 World Expo, the Wedge Park in Pudong’s Sanlin Town, the second phase of the Binjiang Forest Park in Pudong, the greenbelt beneath the Yangpu Bridge as well as the sightseein­g flower bridge of Dongjiadu area in Huangpu District and new parks around the Lanxiang Lake, known as the largest artificial lake in Minhang District.

The environmen­t of the creek banks will be further improved, especially the area under the Changshou Road Bridge in Jing’an District and many residentia­l communitie­s along the creek.

The creek is part of a 125km waterway that originates in the Taihu Lake in Jiangsu Province and winds through the cities of Suzhou, Kunshan and Shanghai before finally emptying into the Huangpu River.

Suzhou Creek is known as the Wusong River for most of its journey.

The riverside developmen­t spanning 42km involves Huangpu, Hongkou, Jing’an, Putuo, Changning and Jiading districts — each with unique attraction­s.

Zhu said the downtown sections of the creekside will be opened to the public by the end of 2021.

The creek banks on the upstream section in the suburban districts of Minhang, Qingpu and Jiading will also be developed and opened to the public with larger coverage of the greenbelt than the downtown sections.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China