Beijing's Haidian district is of course known for its many good universities mixed in with high-tech companies, but now it has its eyes fixed on something seemingly different - finance. It aims to build itself into a tech-financial innovation hub.
China is getting a new technology transfer center this October - the first it has cooperated with a foreign partner, in fact - at the high-tech Zhongguancun Haidian innovation zone, in Beijing, where it will connect science parks with high-tech companies.
Have you found your roadmap to navigate the future?
There's no question about it: we do live in an uncertain economic climate. But, one thing that is not uncertain is that companies that ignore China's innovative ability and role in global economic recovery do so at their own risk.
A high-tech company in Beijing's Haidian Science Park (HSP) that has been cooperating with Tsinghua (Qinghua) University, one of China's top schools, is quickly becoming a leader in the information technology industry and related fields.
While technological developments and buzzwords may be everyday stuff in the developed world these days, they are becoming no less so in China, especially in a science park in Beijing, where they have even gotten some more attention.
Beijing's Haidian district is looking for ways to save energy, cut emissions, and develop an environmentally friendly lifestyle, local officials have said.
Even though the administrative committee of the Zhongguancun Haidian Science Park (HSP) is actually a government organization, it does not quite act like one, according to the head of a local company - it's more service-oriented.
One high-tech information-security provider that was established in 2006 is getting a lot of intellectual support from the Haidian Science Park (HSP), which has given it a very high rate of annual growth.
Beijing's Haidian Science Park has its high-tech firms, universities, R&D centers - and ambitious plans to become a global technology and innovation center.
The Zhongguancun administration has a method that encourages innovation among its companies and research institutes, commonly known as the "one plus six" system, an important measure the administration takes on its way to build Zhongguancun into a technology innovation center with global influence.
From its street crammed with electronics shops to its 336-square-kilometer nationally recognized center known as China's Silicon Valley, Zhongguancun Haidian has been a showcase of achievements for the world to see, for the past three decades, the vice-mayor of the Beijing Haidian district, recently remarked.
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