BEIJING, July 29 -- It was built and
they're coming.
Tourists from across China are surging into Beijing
in the wake of last year's Olympics, spurred on by the new look of the old
capital.
"Most tourists came to feel the changes in Beijing
after the Olympic Games. It is the new Beijing they are curious about," said
Zhang Lingjie, deputy manager of the domestic department with the China
International Travel Service head office.
About 85.4 million tourists visited Beijing in the
first half of this year, an increase of 20.8 percent over the same period last
year.
Those travelers brought with them revenue of 127.1
billion yuan ($18.6 billion) up 14.6 percent, according to statistics released
by the municipal tourism authority yesterday.
The strong growth was thanks to a prosperous domestic
tourism market, as 83.6 million of the tourists who came to Beijing, an annual
increase of 21.4 percent, were from the Chinese mainland.
"This is really not easy to achieve with the impact
of the global financial crisis and the flu," Zhang Huiguang, director of Beijing
Tourism Administration, said at a press conference.
On the downside, only about 1.8 million tourists from
outside the mainland visited Beijing in the first six months of the year, "an
obvious slump from the previous years", said Zhang Lingjie, though she refused
to make comparisons with the first six months of last year. She did say,
however, that January's numbers had dropped 29 percent.
The impact of fewer international tourists has
affected Beijing's four- and five-star hotels, which suffered "an especially low
room occupancy rate", a tourism official who insisted on anonymity told China
Daily yesterday.
Hotels are downsizing or involving every employee in
sales in order to boost business, he said.
The slack business has also forced high-level hotels
to cut room rates. According to ctrip.com, a domestic online travel service, a
five-star hotel on Beijing's Financial Street now charges between 398 yuan and
498 yuan for a room.
But Zhang Huiguang said the market for travelers from
outside the mainland has been slowly warming up, especially over the past two
months.
Arrivals hit 364,000 in May and 325,000 in June, up
5.1 and 8.8 percent respectively year over year, according to bureau statistics.
Promotions in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Macao have paid
off, as arrivals from these regions have increased by 40 to 60 percent, said
Zhang Lingjie.
In the latter half of this year, the bureau plans to
strengthen promotions in other parts of Asia including Japan and South Korea.
"Beijing will have a better performance in July,
August, and October," she said.
The city tourism bureau earlier set a goal of
attracting 154 million tourists and 236 billion yuan of revenue this year.
The two goals are respectively 5.6 percent and 6.3
percent higher than 2008.
(Source: China Daily)