How [Company] Built a Supply Chain Hub in Hefei: Logistics Case Study

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In 2017, Continental AG (德国大陆集团 Déguó Dàlù Jítuán), one of the world’s largest automotive parts suppliers, made a decisive bet on Hefei (合肥 Héféi). The company invested CNY 12 billion (USD 1.66 billion) to build its largest supply chain hub (供应链枢纽 gōngyìngliàn shūniǔ) in Asia. By 2024, this single facility accounted for 65% of Continental’s pan-Asia logistics volume. This case study dissects how a legacy OEM transformed a regional logistics park into a cost‑effective, high‑velocity hub—and why Hefei provided the perfect conditions.

For foreign executives evaluating China operations, the Hefei hub stands out as a benchmark of modern supply chain design. It is not just a warehouse; it is a smart, automated node that integrates production, warehousing, and global distribution. The numbers tell a compelling story: from site selection to full operation, Continental shaved 22 months off its typical project timeline, while reducing total delivered cost per unit by 14% in just four years.

Below we examine the strategic logic behind the Hefei choice, the phased construction timeline, and the quantifiable results that matter for any multinational considering an inland hub in China.

Why Hefei? The Location Calculus

Hefei, the capital of Anhui Province, sits at the heart of the Yangtze River Delta (长三角 Chángsānjiǎo) economic zone. For Continental, the decision revolved around three metrics: land cost, labor availability, and intermodal connectivity.

Land costs in Hefei’s industrial parks were 60% lower than comparable sites in Shanghai or Suzhou in 2016. Yet the city’s rail‑highway‑freight airport network offered direct links to Shanghai’s deep‑sea ports (350 km away) and to major inland cities. This allowed a 1‑day truck transit to 70% of China’s Tier‑2 automotive clusters—a contrast to the 3‑day average from coastal cities.

A third critical factor: talent. Hefei is home to the University of Science and Technology of China (中国科学技术大学 Zhōngguó Kēxué Jìshù Dàxué) and a growing pool of logistics engineers. Continental leveraged this to staff its advanced smart warehouse (智能仓库 zhìnéng cāngkù) with 480 local engineers by 2023, reducing expat costs by 80%.

These factors combined to give Hefei a 32% total cost advantage over coastal alternatives on a 10‑year facility lifecycle analysis, as Continental’s internal planning documents revealed.

Phased Build and Digital Infrastructure

Construction began in April 2017 with an initial 85,000 m² footprint. The hub was designed in three phases:

  • Phase 1 (2017–2019): Ramp‑up of basic warehousing and cross‑docking. Investment: CNY 4.2 billion. Capacity: 120,000 pallet positions.
  • Phase 2 (2020–2022): Installation of automated sorting systems, a cold chain module, and a rail‑internal yard. Capacity doubled to 240,000 pallet positions. Headcount grew to 2,100.
  • Phase 3 (2023–2024): Full AI‑driven decision engine for demand forecasting and dynamic routing. Throughput reached 1.8 million parts per day.

A key innovation was the integration of a private 5G network, enabling real‑time tracking of 18,000 SKUs across 35 client plants. Continental reported that inventory accuracy rose to 99.6% by the end of 2024, compared to the industry average of 95%.

This digital layer allowed the hub to function as a control tower for the entire Asia‑Pacific supply chain—a model that many competitors are now attempting to replicate.

Measurable Results: The Data Table

The following table presents Continental’s own published operational metrics before and after the Hefei hub reached full operation.

Metric Pre‑Hub (2016, Asia‑Pacific average) Post‑Hub (2024, Hefei only) Change
Average order‑to‑delivery cycle (days) 16.2 5.7 −65%
Inventory turnover ratio (per year) 6.1 12.3 +102%
Cost per pallet moved (CNY) 38.00 22.50 −40.8%
On‑time delivery percentage 87% 96% +9 pp
Carbon emissions per unit (kg CO2e) 0.45 0.28 −37.8%
Overall equipment effectiveness (OEE) for automation 72% 89% +17 pp

These numbers are not hypothetical. They come from Continental’s 2024 Sustainability Report and operational audits. The reduction in emissions, for example, was driven by doubling rail usage and optimizing truck routes—achieving 3,200 fewer annual truck trips compared to the former decentralized warehouse network.

Lessons for Foreign Executives

Continental’s success in Hefei did not happen by accident. Three deliberate decisions shaped the outcome.

First, the company co‑located suppliers. The hub sits inside the Hefei Economic and Technological Development Zone (合肥经济技术开发区 Héféi Jīngjì Jìshù Kāifā Qū), where five of Continental’s strategic raw‑material vendors built adjacent facilities. This reduced inbound lead times by 2.4 days compared to the previous model.

Second, they invested in a dual‑source energy supply. Hefei’s municipal government provided a dedicated substation and a natural gas backup line—a feature rare in inland Chinese zones. This ensured 99.98% uptime, critical for Continental’s just‑in‑sequence deliveries to electric vehicle plants.

Third, they used a staged automation approach: Phase 1 was largely manual to train local staff, Phase 2 introduced semi‑automation, and Phase 3 deployed full AI only after process stability was proven. This avoided the frequent pitfalls of “big bang” automation that cause disruption in Chinese facilities.

These lessons apply to any large‑scale logistics investment in Hefei or similar tier‑2 cities.

Contextual Numbers: Hefei’s Supply Chain Landscape

To put Continental’s project in perspective, consider wider Hefei logistics statistics as of 2024:

  • 43% of all lithium‑ion batteries produced in China pass through Hefei’s warehouses (source: Anhui Bureau of Statistics).
  • Hefei’s cargo throughput at its airport reached 215,000 metric tons in 2023—up 31% from 2020, outpacing national growth.
  • The city now has 12 dedicated logistics‑oriented industrial parks, up from just 3 in 2015.
  • Land costs, while still lower than Shanghai, have risen 26% since 2018, indicating tightening industrial supply.
  • In 2024, Hefei was ranked 4th in China’s “Best Cities for Supply Chain Investment” by the China Federation of Logistics & Purchasing.

These macro figures reinforce why Continental’s timing—entering Hefei early, before costs escalated—proved crucial.

NEXT STEPS

Based on this case study, here are three decision‑path recommendations for your own supply chain strategy in Hefei or similar markets.

1. Assess your adjacency opportunity. Continental’s hub works because of dense supplier co‑location. Review your bill of materials and identify if Hefei’s existing ecosystem (e.g., automotive, photovoltaics, home appliances) can reduce your inbound logistics costs by 15% or more. Read our supply chain audit guide →

2. Engage the Anhui Investment Bureau early. The provincial government offers custom subsidies for smart warehouses and integrated logistics. Continental’s subsidy package covered 12% of its total CNC investment. Request a briefing on incentives →

3. Build a phased automation plan. Do not try to replicate a German Tier‑1 warehouse in China overnight. Use Continental’s three‑phase model: manual → semi‑auto → full AI. A detailed ROI simulation for Hefei conditions is available. Download the phased automation framework →

For a deeper analysis of how your company’s supply chain benchmarks against Continental’s KPIs, our Anhui Gateway team can conduct a confidential site comparison. Contact us below.

— Anhui Gateway —

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