China's Xinjiang unveils 6 new scenic highway routes to boost tourism
URUMQI -- Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region has unveiled six new scenic highways, investing 10.7 billion yuan (about $1.5 billion) to develop 965 km of tourism-focused roads.
The routes connect diverse landscapes, from snow-capped mountains and grasslands to forests, lakes, deserts and oases, and aim to enhance the region's "fast entry, slow travel" transportation network and enrich self-driving tourism experiences, according to the regional transport department.
The newly constructed highways are designed to bridge key attractions across Xinjiang's vast terrain, where destinations are often widely dispersed, the department said.
Xinjiang has intensified efforts to build a multidimensional travel network in recent years. Alongside the highways, the region has expanded aviation routes, launched specialty railway circuits like the Taklimakan Desert Loop, and developed iconic tourist roads.
- Serbian president meets HBIS chief, backs green steel push in Belgrade
- Chinese-built cruise ship passes sea trials
- Senior Jiangxi official Li Wei investigated for discipline violations
- Guangzhou launches latest affordable housing scheme
- Shandong capital unveils Novi Sad-inspired sister city garden
- China's port throughput expands in early 2026 on strong container growth
































