Conference & Meetings World Issue 103 | Page 43

Shenzhen World China’s great leap forward his November, China will open Phase 1 of what will become the largest exhibition and events venue in the world. The new Shenzhen World complex is located just across the border from Hong Kong in southern China and is a truly breathtaking achievement of planning and engineering. With Shenzhen transforming itself in recent decades from a small fishing town of 30,000 people, to a 19m population super-city that boasts a GDP third only in China to Beijing and Shanghai, the Shenzhen World Exhibition and Convention Center is set to be the main convening platform for China’s Pearl River Delta industries and knowledge pool to engage with the wider world. CMW’s editor visited the venue ahead of its soft opening in November, High-tech is embedded in the building and there are close links with Huawei and Tencent, all based in the city. Above: Mr Mao Daben, Executive Deputy General Director at Shenzhen World while the first official major event, a national furniture fair in March 2020, will take over a significant part of the Phase 1 capacity of 400,000sqm space across 16 standard indoor halls, a mega hall of 48,000sqm, one conference centre and one more event centre hall with a capacity for 13,500 attendees. The opening of Shenzhen World will allow many traditional and growing events to transfer from the city’s old conference and exhibition centre and its maximum capacity of 110,000sqm. With a fishbone-style roof running the length of the new 1.75km construction, the Shenzhen World project is striking to say the least. The two lobbies alone each have 6,000sqm. German consultants JWC have ensured a high specification all through for planners and organisers, and there are to be four hotels on site when the Phase 2 completion is completed. “We often compare Shenzhen to the US because it is home to many immigrants from across China and has a very young population with an average age of 32,” Shenzhen World General Director Mr Ma Jun tells CMW. This, he notes, is a big contributor to the vibrancy of the city and its high-tech orientation. Wages in ISSUE 103 Shenzhen World • Phase 1 to deliver 400,000sqm of purpose-built indoor exhibition space. • Phase 2 will add a further 100,000sqm. • The venue is designed with an organising spine to connect 19 halls arranged symmetrically along a central corridor. • There are two main registration lobbies directly connected to the subway, two VIP entrances to the west, plus the grand South Entrance. • A two-level central corridor moves visitors from North to South. • Shenzhen World is 3km from Shenzhen Airport and 75km from Hong Kong Airport. • The venue is served by two metro stations. Shenzhen are higher than elsewhere in the country, so the venue and city are beacons for young upwardly mobile elites and start-ups. International venue specialists SMG are contracted to support operations at a venue which will have two metro stations. High-tech is embedded in the venue building and there are close links with Huawei, Tencent and DJI, all global companies based in the city. Shenzhen’s growth rate of 7.6% is higher than Beijing and Shanghai and Jochen Witt, CEO of JWC Consultants, notes that over 50% of all exhibition space sold in China is now in the Pearl River Delta. Shenzhen World Deputy General Director Mao Daben tells CMW that 2.2m sqm of event space has been booked for 2020 and he forecasts 2.5m - 3m sqm for 2021. He expects the centre to break even within five years, once the surrounding infrastructure is completed. / CONFERENCE & MEETINGS WORLD / 43