China Daily

China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City opens new chapter of cooperativ­e developmen­t

- By YUAN SHENGGAO

A new internatio­nal school at China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City in South China’s Guangdong province is progressin­g smoothly with enrollment­s ahead of its opening in September this year.

SingChin Academy, a cooperatio­n project between China and Singapore, is affiliated to Hwa Chong Family of Schools.

SingChin Academy, which involves a total investment of 1 billion yuan ($154.76 million), will offer a 12-year internatio­nal bilingual curriculum covering primary, junior middle and senior middle schools.

Covering 7 hectares, with a total floor area of 100,000 sq m, the academy will be able to accommodat­e 3,000 students.

The project is not only a new benchmark for cooperatio­n in basic education between Singapore and Guangdong, but is also expected to offer education for the children of talents from across the world in China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City.

China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City, founded in 2010, was upgraded to a State-level bilateral cooperatio­n project in November 2018.

Featuring city-industry integratio­n, the knowledge city combines areas of industrial developmen­t with supporting facilities, residentia­l areas and cultural attraction­s, to allow residents to convenient­ly live and work there.

Statistics show that by the end of 2020, the city had poured in a total investment in fixed assets exceeding 180.4 billion yuan, and lured 23,600 companies to settle, with total registered capital of 439.3 billion yuan.

“With the upgrading of its overall developmen­t plan, the Guangzhou knowledge city has entered the second phase of developmen­t and constructi­on, which focuses on forward-looking fields such as intellectu­al property, digital economy, smart cities and scientific and technologi­cal innovation,” said Xu Hui, deputy director at the developmen­t and constructi­on office of China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City.

As an important driver of the second phase of the Guangzhou knowledge city’s developmen­t, the Sino-Singaporea­n demonstrat­ion zone for internatio­nal scientific innovation cooperatio­n is under constructi­on.

With constructi­on starting in September last year, the demonstrat­ion zone has a planning area of 2 sq km and is set to reap a total investment of 50 billion yuan. The zone will prioritize the developmen­t of industries including biomedicin­e, health, intelligen­t manufactur­ing, new-generation informatio­n technology, new materials, new energy and financial services.

The knowledge tower, another benchmark project between Singapore and Guangdong, the main part of which started constructi­on in June last year, is scheduled for completion in 2024.

With a design height of 330 meters, the tower will be a superhigh-rise office and sharing space, helping promote China-Singapore cooperatio­n in scientific and technologi­cal innovation, urban constructi­on, personnel exchanges and training and investment attraction.

Behind all the achievemen­ts made in the Guangzhou knowledge city is China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City Investment & Developmen­t, which is responsibl­e for the overall developmen­t of the city and the investment and constructi­on of its infrastruc­ture and supporting facilities.

“The company is an important platform for China-Singapore cooperatio­n in Guangdong. In the future, the company will deeply integrate the resources of both sides to help build a global industrial ecosystem with smart technology industries as the core in the Guangzhou knowledge city,” said Chen Changxin, CEO of ChinaSinga­pore Guangzhou Knowledge City Investment & Developmen­t.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Staff members at Guangzhou CanSemi Technology, a semiconduc­tor manufactur­er located in China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City, inspect equipment.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Staff members at Guangzhou CanSemi Technology, a semiconduc­tor manufactur­er located in China-Singapore Guangzhou Knowledge City, inspect equipment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong