Zhang Xin
Zhang Xin was born in Beijing, China on August 24th, 1965 and is the Chinese Business Executive. At the age of 59, Zhang Xin biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 59 years old, Zhang Xin physical status not available right now. We will update Zhang Xin's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Upon graduation, Zhang was hired by Barings PLC (later Barings Bank), which had scouted Cambridge for students with knowledge of privatization in China, and which hired Zhang on the strength of her master's thesis on the topic. She returned to Hong Kong to work, but in 1993 her unit at Barings was acquired by Goldman Sachs, and Zhang was transferred to New York City, where she helped bring privatized Chinese factories to the public stock exchange. Intrigued by China's burgeoning urbanization, she returned to her hometown, Beijing, where she met and married her husband—who purportedly proposed just four days after they met, in 1994. In 1994, the couple began a mixed-use development project on unwanted land, called "New Town".
She co-founded Hongshi (meaning Red Stone), which became SOHO China, with her husband Pan Shiyi in 1995. Over the next decade, they began six additional development projects in China, including a residential development in Boao, on the island of Hainan, and the Commune by the Great Wall, a managed boutique hotel in Beijing featuring the works of twelve Asian architects recruited by Zhang. Early in their marriage and business relationship, the couple experienced friction due to differing ideas of how the business should be run, leading Zhang to return to England for a time to reflect. Eventually, she decided to return to her husband, but left the business for a time, returning to focus on the design end when business increased.
Within 10 years after Zhang and Shiyi starting their company, it was the largest property developer in the country, with Zhang coming to be called "the woman who built Beijing". By 2008, the couple was described by The Times as "China's most visible and flamboyant property tycoons". In 2011, Zhang began to transition from merely developing and selling properties to buying and leasing space, and branched out of China by acquiring a $600 million stake in New York City's Park Avenue Plaza, followed by participation in a group acquiring a 40 percent stake in the General Motors Building in midtown Manhattan in 2014, for a reported $1.4 billion. By that time, Zhang, through SOHO China, was involved in 18 developments in Beijing and 11 in Shanghai.
In 2014, Zhang and her husband launched a $100 million charitable initiative, the SOHO China Scholarships, "to fund disadvantaged Chinese students at top institutions across the globe", including gifts of over $10 million to Yale University, over $15 million to Harvard University, and $10 million to the University of Chicago; the gifts engendered some controversy among critics who felt that the money could have been spent improving schools in China. The SOHO China Scholarships support approximately 50 Chinese students pursuing undergraduate degrees at partner universities.
SOHO China began a transition from a business model of building and selling properties to one of buying and leasing them, with Zhang participating in the February 2015 launch of the SOHO 3Q shared office space sector, leasing shared space to companies in cities in China.
Zhang has received international awards for her role as an architectural patron in China and as an entrepreneur. In 2002, she was awarded a special prize at the 8th la Biennale di Venezia for Commune by the Great Wall, a private collection of architecture, now a hotel.
Zhang is a member of World Economic Forum, Davos and a board member of the Harvard Global Advisory Council. She served as a trustee to the China Institute in America from 2005 to 2010, and was recognized by the China Institute with a Blue Cloud Award in 2010. In 2014, Zhang was listed as the 62nd most powerful woman in the world by Forbes. and is "regularly named one of the top businesswomen in the world". Zhang and her husband have also been ranked by Forbes among the "world's most powerful couples". Zhang has been named a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art and of the Asia Business Council.