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Virtual tours provide a unique insight

XINHUA | Updated: 2020-03-13 08:16
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A Potala Palace tourist guide is featured on the first livestreaming tour of the complex on March 1. XINHUA

To make the tours easier, China's major online travel agency Trip.com launched a "cloud tour" campaign last month, inviting travel service providers to make over 7,000 audio guides free for tourists online.

On March 1, the Potala Palace, a landmark building in China's Tibet autonomous region, held a livestreaming tour the first time in its over 1,300-year history. The tour received about 920,000 views, more than half of the total visits the palace receives a year.

Since Feb 21, Huang and her colleagues have been livestreaming tours of the village, which boasts 124 intact traditional Hui-style buildings as well as rural scenery, on multiple Chinese short video sites.

"It's the time of year the village is the most colorful, and we hope more people can enjoy the scenery here," she says.

Huang leads viewers on a typical visiting route as before, but the experience is new, as there are more interactions online and she has to pay attention to keep the phone at the right angle for her viewers.

In the past, it would take around 70 minutes to finish the walking tour. The new way takes around 20 minutes more, and focuses on three to four selected sites.

"I'm glad that many viewers left comments that they'll come to visit after the coronavirus outbreak ends," Huang says.

Hu Weiping, the marketing supervisor of Yixian County Hui Huang Tourism Group, which organized these trips, says that while the online tours cannot give visitors the full experience, they can help the sites reach more people.

"Online tours will be an important promotional method in the future," says Hu. "Tourist sites can use them to build influence online and lure more visitors through interaction."

Xu Yun, a resident in Hefei, the provincial capital of Anhui, is a fan of online tours. In two hours, she visited zoos and aquariums along with some 900,000 other viewers on the livestreaming platform of e-commerce site Taobao.

"It feels wonderful to 'travel' with so many people," Xu says."Viewing the animals in real time with the host and reading all the comments is fun during my long stay at home."

Xu says livestreaming is more interactive, which makes it different from watching travel shows on the television.

"Some tours with unique perspectives can also give me ideas for planning offline visits to these places in the future," she says.

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