13 Cities to Explore
Discover the unique charm of each city
China's ancient capital of six dynasties, where 2,500 years of imperial history meets modern innovation—a city of plum blossoms, Ming walls, and profound cultural heritage.
Taihu Lake pearl and powerhouse of integrated circuits, IoT chips, and photovoltaic solar manufacturing in southern Jiangsu.
Home of XCMG—one of the world's top three construction machinery makers and a strategic transport hub across five provinces.
A new-energy powerhouse where Trina Solar leads global photovoltaics and CRRC builds next-generation rail transit.
A 2,500-year-old city where classical gardens meet modern prosperity—the legendary 'Venice of the East' where scholars, merchants, and artists created China's most refined urban culture.
Known as "China's First Modern City," Nantong sits at the Yangtze River estuary, blending rich industrial heritage with beautiful river and sea landscapes.
The eastern terminus of the New Eurasian Land Bridge, famous as the setting of Journey to the West Huaguo Mountain and a major deep-water port.
The historic hometown of Premier Zhou Enlai, a canal city along the Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal known for its Huaiyang cuisine — one of China's Four Great Culinary Traditions.
A sprawling coastal city in Jiangsu known for its vast wetlands, the Dafeng Elk Reserve — home to China largest elk herd, and the Red-crowned Crane Nature Reserve.
A 2,500-year-old city along the Grand Canal—famous for Slender West Lake and Huaiyang cuisine.
Historic port city where the Grand Canal meets the Yangtze—famous for Jinshan Temple and Zhenjiang vinegar.
A coastal city known as the birthplace of private enterprise in China, featuring sacred Buddhist mountains and unique culinary traditions.
The hometown of Xiang Yu, a historic city on the shores of Hongze Lake, famous for its wetlands and Yanghe baijiu.