Sanyuanli vegetable market divides the business scope of stall owners by location, such as 1~20 selling fruits, 2 1~65 selling groceries and meat. Gao Daquan, a category of individual stall owners, has a comprehensive overall planning, which makes Sanyuanli vegetable market "nothing you can't buy, only something you can't think of".
Here, you can find foreign dignitaries, embassy officials, chefs, famous writers, musicians and other celebrities in five-star hotels, and you may also meet stars such as Gao Yuanyuan, Jiang and Yang Lan.
Here, you can find countless global ingredients, from Australian lobster, Spanish red shrimp and Arctic sweet shrimp, to turkey, water duck and steaks of various grades, as well as rambutan in Thailand and green snake fruit in Chile.
Development history of Sanyuanli vegetable market
Sanyuanli vegetable market belongs to Zuojiazhuang community economic management center, which was an open-air vegetable market occupying both sides of the road more than 30 years ago. 1992 retreats into the hall, 1996 starts the closed management, and installs doors and windows, which can be regarded as entering the room.
Sanyuanli vegetable market is close to the embassy district, and there are many five-star hotels around it. Foreigners are always passing by. As a result, a politician realized that a messy vegetable market would lose the face of the capital, not to mention foreigners have to buy food and position the vegetable market as a high-end boutique consumption closer to the market demand.
In 2004, Sanyuanli vegetable market ushered in transformation and replaced floor tiles; Before the Olympics, it was all replaced with marble, and the sewers and electricity consumption were improved.
On 20 13, Zuojiazhuang Community Economic Management Center closed Sanyuanli Vegetable Market and replaced the previous small door with rock wool board. In addition, a mini parking lot has been opened on the west side of the main entrance of the vegetable market, which is dedicated to parking merchants' carts, ending the history of disturbing people and occupying roads.