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Beijing’s Dingdian Park Tops Out Steel Frame Ahead of 2026 Opening

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The indoor children’s attraction in Beijing’s Tongzhou District has completed its steel structure, keeping the project on track to open later this year as one of Asia’s largest indoor family parks.

Dingdian Park – the indoor children’s theme park under construction in Beijing’s sub-city centre – has completed its full steel structure frame, marking a significant milestone on the path to a 2026 opening. The project sits in the cultural tourism zone of Beijing’s Municipal Administrative Centre in Tongzhou District, with a total floor area of approximately 72,000 square metres and an estimated total investment of 1.8 billion yuan. 

The park occupies a site between Wansheng Xi and Wansheng Dong stations on Subway Line 7. That puts it in direct proximity to Universal Beijing Resort – a deliberate piece of district planning rather than coincidence. 

The building’s design takes its visual cues from a Rubik’s cube. The northern atrium will house Asia’s largest indoor dynamic pedestrian street, fitted with a giant overhead ceiling screen. A large naked-eye 3D screen will also be installed on the south-east corner of the outdoor office building. 

Five themed zones will anchor the attraction, bringing together major international entertainment brands including Hasbro, Mattel and Crayola. Among the confirmed highlights is the world’s first Peppa Pig indoor ice and snow park, featuring themed tree houses, ice castles and slides, with artificial snow overhead. 

The park plans to incorporate a themed hotel, commercial mall and business centre, with annual visitor numbers projected to exceed two million. 

The Tongzhou District government confirmed at its early-2026 Two Sessions that Dingdian Park would open this year. Once open, it is set to become Asia’s largest indoor children’s theme park. 

The Tongzhou cultural tourism zone is building a cluster rather than a single destination. Haichang Ocean Park is also scheduled to open in the district in 2026, adding further capacity to a corridor already anchored by Universal Beijing Resort. For the Beijing market, the combination of multiple family-focused parks within a single transit-connected zone represents a structural shift in how the city’s leisure offer is organised. 

Image: Urban Construction Group

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