[ RESEARCH ]
The Industrial Map of Chinese Manufacturing
We publish structural research industry by industry, at the granularity of individual industrial clusters, built on real factory samples. Every report cross-references two sources — public membership rolls from trade associations, and verified factories identified by Tianxia Gongchang. The full factory list lives on the main platform.
Tibet's Liquor, Beverage and Refined Tea Manufacturing: A Small-Scale Industry Built on Glacier Water and Highland Barley
Anchored by glacier water from the Nyenchen Tanglha range and highland barley grown at altitude, Tibet's beverage manufacturing sector — led by Lhasa Beer and 5100 Glacier Water — is small in scale but distinct in resource character.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Guizhou Agricultural Food Processing: Three Pillars — Chili, Rosa roxburghii, and Tea
Guizhou's agricultural food processing industry is anchored by three main tracks — chili processing as the largest segment, Rosa roxburghii (cilizi) as an emerging deep-processing niche, and tea as the traditional backbone.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Shaanxi Wood Processing and Wood-Bamboo-Rattan-Palm-Grass Products: Ecology-Constrained Transformation in the Qinba Forest Zone
Shaanxi is not a major wood-processing province, but the Qinba Mountains hold substantial timber reserves. Since the 1998 commercial logging ban, the sector pivoted toward rattan weaving in Hanzhong Nanzheng, grass weaving in Shangluo Luonan, and close-market panel and door manufacturing in the Guanzhong plain.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Chongqing Furniture Manufacturing: Cluster Logic, Leading Enterprises and the Path to Southwest Expansion
The foundation of Chongqing's furniture manufacturing lies not in any single industrial park, but in the internal logic built after absorbing eastern industrial transfers — stretching a Southwest market coverage radius through Bishan's factory alliance, Changshou's wood-door base, and Yongchuan's timber trading hub.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Qinghai's Leather, Fur and Tibetan Carpet Industry: Highland Raw Materials, Export Routes, and the Real Limits of Light Manufacturing
Qinghai's leather and fur industry centers on two highland raw materials — Xining white wool and yak hides — and an export-oriented Tibetan carpet sector; modern tanneries and shoe factories are nearly absent, a reality worth understanding honestly.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Liaoning Paper and Paper Products Industry: Industrial Packaging Backbone and Coastal Export Support
Liaoning's paper industry centers on industrial packaging, with Shenyang, Dalian, and Fushun forming differentiated corrugated packaging capacity, while Dandong adds papermaking equipment manufacturing, all serving Northeast China's old industrial base and Dalian Port export packaging needs.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Heilongjiang Textile and Apparel Industry: A Map of Linen Heritage and Border Trade Exports
Heilongjiang's textile and apparel sector is anchored by a historic linen textile legacy, with Lanxi's linen car seat cluster as the most substantive manufacturing node today, and Suifenhe and Heihe as key export conduits to Russia.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Heilongjiang Tobacco Products Industry: Four-Factory Structure Under the Monopoly System
Heilongjiang's tobacco products industry is structured around a single industrial entity — Heilongjiang Tobacco Industry Co., Ltd. — overseeing four cigarette factories, with roughly 845,000 cases of annual output and a tobacco leaf base of about 500,000 mu, forming a typical state monopoly industrial ecosystem in northeast China.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Qinghai's Liquor, Beverage and Refined Tea Manufacturing: One Cup of Barley Liquor and One Bottle of Highland Water
Qinghai's sector rests on two pillars — highland barley liquor and plateau natural water — while refined tea is almost a void. This study maps the real scale, leaders, and upstream supply opportunities across liquor, beverage, and tea.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Chongqing's Apparel and Garment Industry: The Rise and Fall of a Yu-Style Garment Chain Born from the Chaotianmen Wholesale Market
Chongqing's apparel rests not on weaving but on the Yu-style garment cluster that grew out of the Chaotianmen wholesale market. It once had thousands of firms and eight billion yuan in annual turnover, then shrank under e-commerce, before reinventing itself through a Banan base, livestream markets, and digital customization. This report maps a garment chain defined by processing and circulation.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Tibet's Furniture Manufacturing Industry: The Handcrafted Foundation of Tibetan Painted Furniture and the Scarcity of Scaled Factories
Tibet's furniture manufacturing is dominated by Tibetan painted furniture — tables, cabinets, and chests — with very few scaled factories. Rather than papering over the data scarcity, this report focuses on the handcrafted woodcarving and painting techniques, local-market supply, and limited industrialization, presenting an honest picture.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research
Guizhou's Textile Industry: An Absorbed Upstream Built from the Raw-Material End
Guizhou's textiles did not start at the loom. They were drawn in by investment promotion from the upstream chain — chemical fiber, weaving, dyeing. Through Hengli's Guiyang polyester base, Anlong's weaving, and dyeing-chain repair, and through the logic of resource costs, this report maps the real scale and gaps of an emerging upstream.
— Tianxia Gongchang Research