Villages along the golden chestnut coast in Linshu integrate scattered folk handicraft resources to build a regional intangible cultural heritage industrial belt and develop rural "beautiful economy".
Taking Shawo Village as the pilot, multiple villages break administrative boundaries, unite characteristic folk crafts and set shared creation and sales spaces. Local villagers turn traditional handicrafts into stable income sources via centralized industrial operation.
The cluster development model revitalizes fading folk arts, creates nearby jobs for rural residents and injects lasting momentum into Linshu's integrated rural revitalization.
Editor:韩蒙蒙