Over 500 Chinese scenic spots reduce ticket prices for more visitors
Scenic
spots across China are striving to attract more visitors for the
upcoming eight-day National Day holiday, with more than 500 exempting or
reducing ticket prices.To get more news about China scenic spots, you can visit shine news official website.
The
first super long holiday since the coronavirus epidemic will arrive on
October 1. Traditionally seen as tourism's golden week, the holiday has
become even more cherished by industry participants who were hard hit
during the virus outbreak.
The Altay region in northwestern
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region rebooted tourism after a new round of
COVID-19 cases withered in the region's capital city Urumqi in August. A
total of 32 A-level scenic spots have exempted ticket fees, including
the Kanas Lake scenic area and Koktokay National Geopark, from September
6 to November 10.
The ancient city Xi'an in northwest China's
Shaanxi Province has also suspended entrance fees for 53 A-level scenic
spots, including the City Wall and the Tang Paradise, an incentive
spanning the summer vacation and the National Day holiday.Suzhou in east
China's Jiangsu Province boasts many classic Chinese gardens listed
among UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Since August, the city has rolled out
one million tickets valued at just 1 yuan (0.15 U.S. dollars) for 14
renowned gardens, such as the Humble Administrator's Garden and the Lion
Grove Garden.
Other regions that offer free or reduced ticket
fees include Hubei, Shanxi, Guizhou and Yunnan provinces, as well as the
tourist city Qingdao, in east China.
Since this year's National
Day holiday is longer than the usual one week and the epidmic has
restrained overseas tourists, people tend to choose domestic long-haul
journeys. That makes such regions as Shaanxi, Sichuan, Yunnan, Tibet,
Xinjiang, Qinghai and Guizhou hot tourist destinations.
According
to data from Ctrip, China's largest online travel agency, the number of
searches on travels in northwestern regions increased by 475 percent
over last year. Lanzhou, capital of northwestern Gansu Province, even
made it among the top four most-searched cities.With free or
reduced-free entry, tourist numbers have increased. Beijing Daily
reported that after 12 scenic spots in Qingdao exempted ticket fees in
August, 864, 800 visitors were recorded in a month, among whom 474,000
went to the Laoshan Mountain scenic area, an increase by 73.63 percent.
Consumption
spending on catering, accommodation, transport and shopping rose. "The
number of tourists taking boats increased significantly," said a staffer
at Laoshan Mountain scenic area.
The Wall