Visitors wait for a fountain show of light and music in Hangzhou. Xu Kangping/For China Daily
Tourists are taking a revenge of sorts on Hangzhou, Zhejiang province.
During the G20 Summit earlier this month, most of the city, including its scenic West Lake, was cordoned off to regular tourists as security was tightened for the heads of state attending the meetings.
For the just-ended Mid-Autumn Festival and next month's National Day holidays, it is the tourists' turn to take over China's most famous scenic city. Many of them are drawn to a performance adapted from the spectacular G20 gala.
The number of bookings by domestic visitors traveling on package or self-guided tours to Hangzhou skyrocketed by 218 percent from Sept 10 through Sunday, said Lvmama, an online travel-service provider. The G20 Leaders' Summit ended on Sept 5.
Ctrip, the country's largest online travel agency, reported a surge of 150 percent year-on-year from Sept 13 to 17.
After the G20, some travel agencies immediately launched a one-day tour of Hangzhou, mainly featuring the conference venue of the G20 summit and the part of West Lake where the G20 evening gala, which combined dance and lighting effects, took place.
"We've never launched a one-day Hangzhou tour before. The tour product was created upon consumers' request, and the 200 openings were snapped up quickly," said Xu Xiao, a tour guide in Shangrao, Jiangxi province, with Shanghai Wenrui International Travel Agency.
"The information about this new route to Hangzhou published on our company's WeChat platform was viewed more than five times the average. We estimate that the route will be popular for at least half a year," she added.