Debut economy reshaping Beijing's consumption map
During a recent weekend, I found myself waiting in line for a limited-edition latte at Wangfujing WellTown in Beijing's Tongzhou district. Around me, families compared shopping bags, while young groups livestreamed their "first visit".
As a reporter who has long covered macroeconomic data and policy briefings, I am used to writing about consumption in percentage points. That afternoon, I experienced it in decibels, aromas and QR codes.
The highly anticipated Wanli commercial and entertainment complex, which officially opened in late December, has quickly become one of the capital's hottest new landmarks.
Located in the cultural tourism area of the Beijing Municipal Administrative Center, a short walk west of the Universal Beijing Resort, the Wanli complex consists of three major sections: Wangfujing WellTown, Nous Land Hotel, and Tingyun Micro-Resort Town. Covering a floor area of around 476,300 square meters, it hosts a wide range of international brands and first stores.
Anchored by the largest outlet complex in North China, Wangfujing WellTown breaks away from the traditional outlet model. Retail is only the entry point. The real draw is the fusion of shopping, immersive exhibitions, dining, sports, pet socializing and digital entertainment — a multidimensional consumption ecosystem.
Crossing a rainbow bridge from the outlet's third-floor corridor into Tingyun Micro-Resort Town, I stepped into what felt like an open-air playground disguised as a commercial street. MARKET's first "village concept" store blended waterside cultural motifs with trendy art aesthetics. VRIL's national first store attracted outdoor enthusiasts eager to test next-season gear. At BLACKHAND's first pet-themed flagship, dogs chased each other freely.
Across Beijing, the "debut economy" is reshaping the city's consumption map. In the fourth quarter of 2025 alone, multiple districts welcomed flagship and first stores. At Haidian district's Zhongguancun Art Park, Chili's opened its first store in Beijing, while Lululemon and GAGA launched flagship stores tailored to western Beijing's demographic profile. These openings are not incremental additions; they are strategic anchors designed to catalyze surrounding commercial vitality.
Urban renewal has become the dominant supply driver. According to CBRE's 2025 Beijing Real Estate Market Review, the entire 534,000 sq m of new retail property supply last year originated from urban renewal projects. In the fourth quarter alone, two revamped projects in secondary business districts, Zhongguancun Art Park and Longfu Temple, delivered a combined 294,000 square meters of new space.
When I revisited Longfu Temple, I was struck by how thoroughly it had transformed from a traditional shopping destination into what planners now call a "city living room". Bookstores host cultural salons, cafes double up as creative workspaces, and exhibitions spill into retail corridors. Consumption is no longer confined to buying goods; it is about inhabiting a curated lifestyle.
A series of new landmarks illustrates how Beijing's commercial districts are evolving from "places to buy things" into "stages to experience life". Over the past few years, municipal policies have supported this shift, encouraging spaces that integrate streetscapes, sports events, performances, nighttime economy and digital scenarios into a multidimensional consumption matrix.
Local authorities have given full play to building Beijing into an international consumption center city with policy incentives such as consumption credit support and improved payment convenience, while promoting the integration of catering, culture, tourism and creative industries.
Data from the Beijing Municipal Commerce Bureau show that more than 960 first stores opened in the city in the first 11 months of 2025. Since 2019, Beijing has attracted over 5,000 first stores, with 12 global debut centers — including Sanlitun Taikoo Li — emerging as new landmarks for fashion consumption.
As I left Wanli at dusk, shopping bag in hand, I reflected on how the act of consumption has evolved. Each mobile payment is now embedded in a broader narrative: technological iteration, cultural confidence, urban renewal and policy orchestration.
For years, I have written that China's long-term growth fundamentals — vast potential, strong resilience and abundant vitality — remain intact. Walking through Beijing's new commercial landmarks, I could feel those fundamentals materialize in concrete, glass and crowd energy.
New consumption is not merely about higher retail sales; it is about redefining how a modern city curates experience, cultivates brands and competes globally for attention. From immersive museums to robot demonstrations, from pet social spaces to digital entertainment, the city's evolving "consumption map" is both an economic indicator and a cultural statement.




























