
On 1 February China State Railway Group commenced track-laying on the 614-kilometre Xiong’an–Xinzhou high-speed railway, a pivotal segment of the broader Beijing-Kunming HSR artery. The project will shorten north-south transit times by nearly two hours when it opens in late 2027, linking Hebei’s Xiong’an New Area with Shanxi’s capital Taiyuan and onward to Southwest China.
The new line forms part of the national “eight-vertical, eight-horizontal” network plan and is designed for 350 km/h operations. Once complete, door-to-door travel from Beijing Daxing Airport to Xinzhou Airport will fall below three hours, enhancing multi-modal connectivity for domestic business travellers and expatriate assignees posted to emerging manufacturing clusters in Shanxi and Henan.
As international mobility increases along these routes, VisaHQ can simplify the visa process for executives, engineers and project teams heading to China. Through its digital platform (https://www.visahq.com/china/), the service offers fast Chinese visa applications, real-time status tracking and expert guidance on current entry rules—helping companies keep their personnel compliant and ready to ride the new high-speed network.
Construction is being executed with a fully digital track-laying management system that integrates BeiDou satellite positioning and AI-enabled ballast robots—technologies that China Railway says can cut labour by 20 percent and improve alignment precision to within two millimetres.
For global mobility teams, the project signals continued infrastructure investment in inland provinces, which could shift expatriate assignment patterns as corporations tap lower-cost talent and logistics bases along the new corridor. Companies with operations in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei economic triangle may find Xiong’an an increasingly attractive site for regional headquarters once high-speed rail puts 70 million people within a 90-minute commuter belt.
Officials added that stations along the route will be equipped with biometric e-gates compatible with foreigners’ passports, mirroring recent upgrades on the Beijing–Harbin line and supporting smoother business-traveller flows.
The new line forms part of the national “eight-vertical, eight-horizontal” network plan and is designed for 350 km/h operations. Once complete, door-to-door travel from Beijing Daxing Airport to Xinzhou Airport will fall below three hours, enhancing multi-modal connectivity for domestic business travellers and expatriate assignees posted to emerging manufacturing clusters in Shanxi and Henan.
As international mobility increases along these routes, VisaHQ can simplify the visa process for executives, engineers and project teams heading to China. Through its digital platform (https://www.visahq.com/china/), the service offers fast Chinese visa applications, real-time status tracking and expert guidance on current entry rules—helping companies keep their personnel compliant and ready to ride the new high-speed network.
Construction is being executed with a fully digital track-laying management system that integrates BeiDou satellite positioning and AI-enabled ballast robots—technologies that China Railway says can cut labour by 20 percent and improve alignment precision to within two millimetres.
For global mobility teams, the project signals continued infrastructure investment in inland provinces, which could shift expatriate assignment patterns as corporations tap lower-cost talent and logistics bases along the new corridor. Companies with operations in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei economic triangle may find Xiong’an an increasingly attractive site for regional headquarters once high-speed rail puts 70 million people within a 90-minute commuter belt.
Officials added that stations along the route will be equipped with biometric e-gates compatible with foreigners’ passports, mirroring recent upgrades on the Beijing–Harbin line and supporting smoother business-traveller flows.











