| Issue |
E3S Web Conf.
Volume 683, 2026
2025 2nd International Conference on Environment Engineering, Urban Planning and Design (EEUPD 2025)
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Article Number | 01018 | |
| Number of page(s) | 5 | |
| Section | Urban Planning and Spatial Governance | |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/e3sconf/202668301018 | |
| Published online | 09 January 2026 | |
County Economic Regeneration through Cultural Economic Geography: The Case of Rongjiang's “Village Super League”
School of Architecture, South China University of Technology, Guangdong, Guangzhou 510641, China
* Corresponding author: yqingpang@163.com
Amidst the weakening of traditional growth drivers, the cultural economy has emerged as a vital pathway for urban regeneration in China’s county-level cities. Focusing on the “Rongjiang Village Super League (VSL)” in Guizhou, this study adopts a cultural economic geography perspective to construct a “cultural capital transformation–industrial response” framework. We use a mixed-methods approach that integrates interrupted time series analysis of panel data (2012–2024) with in-depth interviews, we examine how localized cultural capital drives economic regeneration. Results show that the VSL, as an endogenous form of behavioral cultural capital, significantly transforms into economic value: accelerating tertiary sector growth and spurring a surge in cultural and sports enterprises. Three mechanisms—emotional activation of local identity, convergence of external resources, and industrial cross-boundary integration—underpin this transformation, collectively reshaping the county’s socioeconomic space. This study empirically validates the role of behavioral cultural capital in county-level regeneration, offering a grassroots Chinese case for culture-driven development.
© The Authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2026
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Current usage metrics show cumulative count of Article Views (full-text article views including HTML views, PDF and ePub downloads, according to the available data) and Abstracts Views on Vision4Press platform.
Data correspond to usage on the plateform after 2015. The current usage metrics is available 48-96 hours after online publication and is updated daily on week days.
Initial download of the metrics may take a while.

