Village offers visitors, city-dwellers reprieve from chaos
Updated: 2013-05-20 14:14
By Mark Hughes and Xie Yu in Wuxi (China Daily)
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The dragon dance represents the best of the ancient town of Lishe, in Wuxi, Jiangsu province. [Photo by Zou Hong/China Daily] |
In a changing world in which vision can be in short supply, with expensive and disastrous results if it goes wrong, the village of Shanlian in Wuxi is an exemplar of success.
Reached after traveling through kilometer upon kilometer of perfectly arranged tea plantations, the air fragrant and the sky blue, it offers a tranquil scene of the slow-paced rural life, of which so many harassed and busy city-dwellers dream.
But it's not all dreams these days. They are coming in droves for just a taste of how the other half lives and then, in many cases, leaving wide-eyed with envy when they realize how rich these country folks have become and how tricky it is to get full-time residency here.
Shanlian has become, in the space of just five years, probably the most beautiful village in the region.
It's all down to the vision of local Party chief Wu Yueping who, when he assumed his authority, decided that the old order of polluting factories and ugly quarries had to go.
Family farms were organized into cooperatives to make land use more efficient, with each family taking a share of profits. A total of 300 million yuan ($48.6 million) was initially invested in improving the scenery with another 100 million yuan to come. Locals (there are 6,300 of them in the 1,749 households) were encouraged to put money into restaurants and hotels and enhanced agriculture, including aquatic farming for crabs and freshwater prawns.
That was phase one and it brought in an income of 2 million yuan last year, mainly from the food industry, including 200,000 yuan from agrotourism, encouraging people to visit the famous orange and chrysanthemum plantations and the conifers used for medicines in the pharmaceutical industry to treat cancer.
Phase two will see the area enlarged, with boating, more fishing, even a five-star hotel. Then comes phase three, when they hope to massively increase trade in farm produce and landscaping plants, using the nearby high-speed rail service to reach further afield and not just the populations of neighboring downtown Wuxi, Shanghai and Suzhou.
Wu also talks of building a farm zoo, a maze and a KTV center.
At Wu's side is one of the youngest deputy Party secretaries in the country, if not the youngest.
Buddhist site blends recreation, education and spiritual tranquility |
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