Beijing attracts cultural investment
Updated: 2013-10-22 17:12
(Xinhua)
|
||||||||
BEIJING -- Four deals worth 175 million yuan ($28.2 million) in the cultural and creative industries will be signed at the 17th Beijing-Hong Kong Economic Cooperation Symposium, which will open in Beijing on Wednesday. Under these deals, enterprises from the cultural and creative industries in Beijing and Hong Kong will cooperate on projects to build creative cultural zones and create digital films.
The Beijing Cultural and Creative Industry Promotion Center will promote a total of 105 culture-related projects in Beijing at the two-day symposium. These projects, with a total investment amount of more than 50 billion yuan ($8.06 billion), cover building the Tianqiao Performance Center, the core area of the National Digital Publishing Base, an online art auction payment system and producing the 3D HD animation "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms."
Beijing has published a total of 370 investment projects in more than ten industries, including the cultural and creative industries, and production services and trade, to attract more investment from Hong Kong.
- Beijing Opera troupe perform in Brazil
- Nature's masterpieces
- Riot police off to Libya peacekeeping mission
- Teacher killed, two wounded in Nevada middle school shooting
- Smog wraps northeast, schools forced to close
- Architect looks to the big picture
- Teachers, students divided over Gaokao reform plan
- Dogfight looms over jets
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Bribery claims feed milk scandal |
The fish that didn't get away |
Stranded in heavy snow at Qomolangma |
Riding the wave of big bargain buy-ups |
US Sinophile traces the evolution of Chinese words |
The dirt on tomb raiders |
Today's Top News
China, Russia reach new consensuses
Apple expected to unveil new iPads
US helps UN destroy Syria's chemical weapons
CNOOC, CNPC win Brazil oilfield bid
'Historic' sorghum shipment to China
Building a bridge of hearts in the heartland of the US
China issues white paper on Tibet's development
Hollywood must think bigger about China
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |