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A small Chinese township becomes the nation's largest industrial robot hub

By Li Gang (People's Daily) 14:28, July 14, 2026

Beijiao township

Spanning merely 92 square kilometers, Beijiao township in Shunde district, Foshan, south China's Guangdong province, boasts an extraordinarily robust manufacturing ecosystem despite its compact size. Vast factory compounds stretch across the land, while freight trucks shuttle continuously between production facilities.

Today, one out of every 20 industrial robots made in China is produced here, making Beijiao the country's largest industrial robot manufacturing hub.

Inside the Intelligent Robot Manufacturing City of HiTrom Han's, a major smart manufacturing base located in Beijiao, one machine immediately caught the eye: a collaborative robot undergoing testing. Its bright orange robotic arm performed operations with an accuracy of less than 0.02 millimeters.

"Can you guess how many companies operate in this building?" asked Qiu Zhan'ou, deputy general manager of HiTrom Han's Industrial Co., Ltd., pointing to a factory building and raising two fingers with a smile.

"More than 20 firms work under one roof. Some make reducers, others produce servo motors, robot bodies or integrated robotic systems. Components manufactured upstairs can simply be sent downstairs by elevator for immediate assembly," he explained.

"Engineers can finish a design on the first floor in the morning, have components delivered from the second floor in the afternoon, and complete prototype testing the very same day," added Tao Yuanming, secretary-general of the Shunde robotics association. In Beijiao, "design in the morning, verification in the afternoon" has become a routine practice.

Robots manufactured by KUKA

"For a single robot, more than 90 percent of its supply chain can be sourced locally in Beijiao. All required components can be assembled within half a day," said Huang Jinshuo, general manager of a local robot technology company.

According to Yuan Xuehua, deputy general manager of another robot company, this rapid response capability and close collaboration have significantly shortened the entire process from design and prototyping to testing, creating a highly efficient industrial ecosystem with tightly integrated local supply chains.

Qiu noted that the manufacturing base is now home to more than 200 robotics and related enterprises. Once fully operational, the park is expected to generate an annual output value of 10 billion yuan ($1.47 billion).

"Robotics industry development in Beijiao is a must born out of pressure," said Hu Bing, deputy mayor of Beijiao township.

Known as one of China's leading home appliance manufacturing centers, Beijiao is home to renowned companies such as home appliance manufacturer Midea. Benefiting from China's reform and opening up, entrepreneurs in Shunde built a thriving home appliance industry. But local businesses understood that the industry's growth would eventually reach its limits.

Around 2010, as the home appliance market slowed and labor costs continued to rise, automation became an urgent necessity.

"Without automated production, factories simply could not keep up with order demands," Tao recalled. Market pressure became the first major force driving Beijiao's transition into the robotics industry.

The confidence to make that transition came from Beijiao's strong manufacturing foundation.

By then, the township had already developed more than 900 manufacturing enterprises covering sheet-metal processing, plastic injection molding, motor production and surface treatment. Many of the core technologies required for industrial robots were already available locally.

First phase of the Intelligent Robot Manufacturing City of HiTrom Han's

Welling Motor, a Midea subsidiary, is an industry leader in servo motors, one of the key components of industrial robots. Precision gears required for reducers can be manufactured by nearby mold makers.

Meanwhile, years of automation upgrades undertaken by large manufacturers in Beijiao and surrounding areas had cultivated a large pool of engineers with expertise in manufacturing processes, equipment and industrial control systems. Many later launched their own businesses, becoming the first generation of entrepreneurs in Beijiao's robotics industry.

After KUKA, a German manufacturer of industrial robots and factory automation systems, placed its China factory in Beijiao, a cluster of world-leading robot enterprises flocked to the township. Upstream and downstream suppliers flocked to the area around the industry leader, gradually forming a complete, self-sufficient industrial chain.

A mature industrial ecosystem is not just about attracting companies; it is about helping them take root and grow.

The story of Huayan Robotics is a notable local success story within the Intelligent Robot Manufacturing City of HiTrom Han's.

In 2018, officials from the Sino-German Industrial Park in Foshan met a team from Huayan Robotics by chance at the Hannover Messe in Germany. Although the company possessed advanced collaborative robot technology, its growth was constrained by limited space and high operating costs.

Over the following two years, local investment promotion officials made repeated visits, introducing Shunde's manufacturing strengths and Beijiao's industrial ecosystem. Their persistence eventually convinced the company to relocate to Beijiao.

Beijiao provided exactly what the company needed most. The Intelligent Robot Manufacturing City of HiTrom Han's offered modern factory facilities. The industrial park positioned Huayan as a leading enterprise within the local industrial chain, fostering coordinated innovation with upstream and downstream partners. Meanwhile, the local government provided full-life-cycle support, offering services covering credit guarantees, intellectual property protection, and more. In March 2025, Huayan Robotics officially moved its headquarters to Beijiao.

With ample industrial space, comprehensive supporting services, strong talent retention and diverse financing channels, Beijiao has developed a full-fledged systematic project for the robotics industry, one that allows enterprises to put down roots the moment they arrive.

Today, embodied AI robots have emerged as a global industry hotspot. Rather than competing directly with major metropolitan areas in training infrastructure or AI talent, Beijiao has chosen a differentiated path. It continues to focus on industrial robot bodies, core components and manufacturing.

Lavichip, a company specializing in robot controllers, moved into the industrial park and has since cut operating costs by 30 percent while seeing its output value rise year on year. The park also hosts manufacturers of various special robots, including machines for solar panel cleaning, underwater pool cleaning, automatic cooking, and high-rise glass curtain wall cleaning.

The transformation of Beijiao demonstrates how a traditional manufacturing township can nurture emerging industries and organically develop a complete industrial cluster.

The experience of Beijiao's robotics industry shows that developing new quality productive forces requires an application-oriented approach, a strong manufacturing foundation and close collaboration across industrial chains. By building on existing strengths and continuously refining them, traditional manufacturing can generate powerful new drivers of high-quality development.

(Photos from the official account of the publicity department of Shunde district on WeChat)

(Web editor: Zhong Wenxing, Liang Jun)

Photos

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