Century-old power plant to open on Yangpu waterfront

Yang Jian
The public will be able to visit the former Yangshupu Power Plant, once East Asia's biggest thermal power plant, from Saturday as part of plans to create a world-class waterfront.
Yang Jian
Century-old power plant to open on Yangpu waterfront
Ti Gong

The 2.7-kilometer riverside area between Yangpu Bridge and the Yangshupu Power Plant will open on Saturday, offering jogging, cycling and walking paths.

Residents and tourists will be able to visit the former Yangshupu Power Plant, once the biggest thermal power plant in East Asia and the city's tallest structure, from Saturday.

The plant, which was built in 1913 and operated until 2010, will be open to the public for the first time along with a dozen of China's earliest industrial heritages in Yangpu District with the opening of a new section of the riverside region along the Huangpu River.

The 2.7-kilometer riverside area between Yangpu Bridge and the power plant will offer jogging, cycling and walking paths, the district government said on Monday.

The Yangpu waterfront is known as the birthplace of China's modern industries with the nation's first water, electricity, shipbuilding and textile companies. Many of the industrial buildings have been preserved during redevelopment of the riverside area.

Twelve factory buildings on seven sites will be unveiled on Saturday as new waterfront attractions.

Visitors will be able to see the exterior of the buildings at first. Eventually they will be able to go inside structures that have been converted into museums and art galleries or for other functions, according to the Yangpu Riverside Investment and Development Co.

These historical structures will become a century-old "industrial expo" and "heritage park" to tell visitors of the evolution from industrial birthplace to the origin of creativity and innovation, said Zuo Weidong, the company's chairman.

The preserved factory buildings, covering a total of 70,000 square meters, also include those once belonging to the city's power station auxiliary equipment factory, the No.1 cotton factory, soap factory and Yangshupu gas plant, all dating back more than 50 years ago. 

Over 100 former machines and production tools have been retained and will be exhibited along the waterfront region. The former industrial layouts have also been largely retained and only unnecessary industrial ruins removed.

Three coal-unloading machines on the former coal wharf, for instance, have become attractions along with bridges at the power plant.

Some of the former boundary walls between two adjoining factories have also been kept.

Small warehouses will become convenience stores, some libraries and service stations, said Guo Yifeng, one of the section's designers.

"The original greenery and ponds have also been retained while some bricks and wood from the obsolete factory buildings have been reused on the pavements and handrails," Guo said.

"It is expected to become an example on how preserved industrial heritages can be combined with open public space," she said.

Century-old power plant to open on Yangpu waterfront
Ti Gong

Two cranes and grab buckets which lifted coal blocks from ships are preserved beside the Yangshupu Power Plant.

Century-old power plant to open on Yangpu waterfront
Ti Gong

An aerial view of part of the 2.7-kilometer riverside area between Yangpu Bridge and the Yangshupu Power Plant

Visitors will first encounter the huge former power station auxiliary equipment factory, covering 17,000 square meters, at the beginning of new waterfront section.

The factory, built in 1921, was once the largest of its kind in China. Some nearby electric warehouses and a church-style power plant have also been retained to show the history of China's early power industry.

The century-old Shanghai Soap Factory features a museum along with a handicraft workshop and cafe. Its former sewage treatment pond has also been preserved.

At the end of the new waterfront section, the Yangshupu power plant and its nearby industrial relics will showcase the whole production procedure dating back over a century ago, said Qin Shu, the architect in charge of the development of the power plant region.

Two cranes and grab buckets took coal blocks from ships before two coal-breakers, which have become like sculptures on the riverside, then crushed the blocks into smaller pieces.

A transport belt then took the coal into a three-story prefabricated workshop. Visitors can enter the workshop to have a panoramic view on the plant and the waterfront, Qin said.

Three dust tanks have also been retained where coal dust was stored for ships to remove to be manufactured into bricks, he added.

"Visitors will be able to imagine the bustling scene of the power plant in the last century through the seven preserved key heritage sites and over 30 machines," Qin said. several coal scuttles have been converted into kiosks for visitors.

Apart from the industrial relics, some 120,000 square meters of greenery, including over 100 species of shrubs and trees, have been planted.

Basketball and volleyball courts have been built along with a roller-skating rink renovated from the former Yangshupu gas plant.

Shanghai's urban planning authority has invited artists to design five artworks to go on permanent display in the area.

The winning works will be key exhibits at the biennial Shanghai Urban Space Art Season 2019 between September and November.

According to plans for a world-class waterfront area, continuous riverside zones will be created along the Huangpu River and Suzhou Creek by 2020, featuring more greenery, preserved historical buildings and bridges.

Sidewalks stretching 45 kilometers on the banks of the Huangpu River between the Yangpu and Xupu bridges have already opened. The city now plans to extend those upstream and downstream while improving the section already open.

Century-old power plant to open on Yangpu waterfront
Ti Gong

A preserved warehouse on the 2.7-kilometer riverside area between Yangpu Bridge and the Yangshupu Power Plant


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