China's train stations incorporate elements that reflect local culture


By AGENCY
Harbin Railway Station got a ‘facelift’ and was refurbished nearly 20 years ago. — Wikimedia Commons

Standing before the bustling railway station in Harbin, capital of northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, 43-year-old architect Li Lili vividly recalls how crowded and chaotic the place was two decades ago.

“A giant grey concrete box filled with deafening shouts and disoriented travellers ... that was my first impression of the province’s largest train station,” Li said.

As she squeezed her way through the crowded concrete building, Li could never have imagined herself becoming a designer and helping with the innovations of such stations. Over her career, many of China’s train stations have evolved from mere passenger entrances into multifunctional modern transport complexes, transforming the travel experience.

“For a long time, travelling by train in China was a haphazard choice for many, with constant congestion at station entrances and on platforms,” Li said.

She explained that in the past, since railways were mainly built for freight trains, many passenger stations were merely subsidiary facilities, without any guidance, diversion routes and other essential services for passengers.

Things began to change in 2008. The advent of high-speed railways significantly reduced travel times by train, spurring a rapid increase in travel demand and the development of new generations of train stations.

Li noted that many train stations seized the opportunity to upgrade their services for the convenience of passengers.

“An example is the elevated walkway in the renovated stations, which connects different platforms from above,” Li said, adding that this innovation greatly reduces intersecting passenger routes within the station, thereby helping travellers reach their trains easily and quickly.

Another change in train station design involves integrating local culture. “This trend has been accompanied by the further expansion of China’s high-speed rail network and the rise of personalised travel since roughly 2016,” Li said. She added that both tourists and local governments now expect train stations to serve as urban landmarks, showcasing the unique characteristics of travel destinations.

“The iconic skyline of Harbin railway station was refurbished in 2018. I incorporated European elements into the redesign of a train station in Mudanjiang City, highlighting its unique history of cultural fusion,” Li said.

As an architect, Li has been involved in designing over 100 train stations in her decades-long career, continually reshaping train stations for the next generation.

“With an increasing number of people favouring new travel modes like experiential tourism and city walks, train stations are becoming city sub-centres. In cities such as Hangzhou and Chongqing, they now incorporate accommodation, entertainment and urban transport,” she said. – Xinhua

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