China Daily

Town played as vanguard in economic opening-up

- By XIE CHUANJIAO in Qingdao, Shandong xiechuanji­ao@chinadaily.com.cn

The lyrics in the song about Lancun town go “There’s a long story about a train station told by grandpa, and another about a shoe factory sung by grandma”.

Lancun, a railway hub in Qingdao, Shandong province, may have a written history dating back 1,700 years, but it only began its first steps toward a modern path of growth when a small train station was built there in 1901.

Starting in the 1970s, factories began to grow around the station, making Lancun known nationwide for leather shoes, and residents were proud that one-tenth of the leather shoes in China were made there.

To date, there are 238 shoe enterprise­s in the town, involving 40,000 employees.

That helped put the town in the role of a vanguard, and it now boasts over 1,000 companies, among which 46 have annual sales surpassing 20 million yuan ($2.9 million).

Lancun also specialize­s in the textile industry. Qingdao Xueda Group President Zhang Shian remembered how a small plant on the edge of bankruptcy had grown into a major company with 15 subsidiari­es and more than 4,000 employees.

“After the reform and opening-up, Xueda became an original equipment manufactur­er for foreign brands, and in the early 1980s we establishe­d a research and developmen­t center and began fostering our own brands,” said the 62-year-old Zhang, adding that since then the profits have grown bigger every year.

In 2017, the company achieved sales revenue of 1.58 billion yuan, an increase of 8.9 percent from the previous year. In Cambodia, Xueda has establishe­d a production base with more than 1,000 workers making 10 million garments annually.

As China turns its focus toward quality growth, Lancun has been upgrading its traditiona­l industry structure to new and high-tech areas.

With convenient transporta­tion facilities, Lancun has become home to a cross-border e-commerce industrial park and a railway logistics park, laying a solid foundation for the town to develop high-tech industries.

Qingdao Yunlu Advanced Materials Technology has become a leading company producing amorphous strips — an advanced material that can help home appliance makers greatly reduce costs. Amorphous strips produced by the company have 50 percent of the domestic market and 35 percent overseas.

“For molten iron at a temperatur­e of 1,500 C, we can bring it down to less than 200 C within a millionth of a second,” said Guo Gang, vice-president of Yunlu.

“Lancun has offered a prime environmen­t that ensures we focus on business growth instead of operating with environmen­tal risks,” Guo said.

A new industrial park based around Qingdao Yunlu is under constructi­on. With an estimated area of 9.1 hectares, the park aims to be a leading amorphous strips production base worldwide.

Last October, a rail transit industrial park spread across 400 hectares opened in Lancun.

Zhou Zunxian, Party chief of Lancun, said the park is expected to be an incubator for companies specialize­d in rail transit equipment maintenanc­e, key components manufactur­ing, and research and developmen­t.

“We will continue to leverage Lancun’s geographic advantage and build it as a new urban area led by an internatio­nal rail transit industrial cluster, with a pleasant living environmen­t,” he said.

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