Kaohsiung Port is moving to open its economic gates wider. The port company [港務公司] on Nov. 20 promoted a highlight commercial bid for the New Ya-wan Twin Towers development [新亞灣雙子星大樓開發案]. The sequencing signals a push to speed investment and execution.
KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan — On Nov. 25, the port company’s Kaohsiung branch gathered the port-area supply chain face to face to air pain points, seek collaboration and review progress. The message afterward was blunt: “sincerely listen, prosper together” (original quote trimmed). The aim is to turn the port from a loading dock into a fuller industrial venue that accelerates operations and investment cases.
Landmark bid for a harbor smart hub
Five days earlier, on Nov. 20, the Kaohsiung branch flagged a signature commercial package tied to the New Ya-wan Twin Towers development [新亞灣雙子星大樓開發案]. The pitch: create a “new landmark smart hub at the harbor” (original quote trimmed) by knitting together offices, travel and cruise services, meetings and exhibitions, and cultural offerings along the waterfront in the Asia New Bay Area [亞灣].
The concept seeks to make people, capital and information intersect at the port’s edge, adding heft to southern Taiwan’s large-scale exhibitions and startup plans. It positions the waterfront as both a business address and a visitor gateway.
Sequencing built to focus attention
The cadence is clear: convene industry to align, then unveil a landmark proposal to pull in investors. With cruise homeport routes returning, a string of official updates before year end is steering market attention back to Kaohsiung.
What investors will watch next
Local players see a reshuffle coming for port-area land use and commercial opportunities. For investors, the practical checklist is tight: watch tender terms, transit and last-mile connections, and regulatory flexibility. The real test is how fast meeting heat becomes ground-breaking progress.

Why it matters
Kaohsiung is leveraging the port to be more than cargo. By pairing a supply-chain roundtable with a flagship Twin Towers proposal, the port company is courting private capital while linking cruise, business travel and meetings. If the execution is swift, the waterfront can become a southern growth engine that pulls people and projects toward the harbor rather than away from it.
Ports worldwide are evolving into mixed-use districts that blend logistics, offices and visitor experiences. Kaohsiung’s playbook mirrors that shift by coupling stakeholder alignment with a visible waterfront anchor. The strategy is simple and execution-heavy: build a place where cargo, people and ideas move in the same corridor.
