Shenyang Meituo’s Foreign Trade Team Watches Sept. 3 Commemoration — Reflection, Responsibility and Global Work Ahead
A thin autumn light fell across the conference room as employees of Shenyang Meituo Steel Structure Co., Ltd.’s Foreign Trade Department gathered to watch the national broadcast on September 3. The program commemorated the 80th anniversary of victory in the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression and the global anti-fascist effort — a broadcast that this year felt both solemn and quietly personal.
Phones were kept down. For a full hour the usual office hum gave way to silence: images of veterans, archival footage and leaders’ remarks filled the screen. “You could hear a pin drop,” recalled Li Na, a junior export coordinator. “What struck me most was how small those black-and-white scenes looked from here, yet they carried such weight.” Her colleague, field manager Wang Jun, added, “It reminded us why steady cooperation matters. Peace is what lets trade and projects proceed without interruption.”
Shenyang Meituo’s team did not treat the viewing as symbolic only. For people whose daily work connects overseas clients with Chinese factories, the story of resilience and partnership was immediately practical. The company specializes in a family of products — from modern steel structure workshops for production lines to large-span steel structure warehouses and a variety of multifunctional steel structure buildings. “When we deliver a warehouse project abroad,” said export director Zhang Hui, “we are exporting more than steel: we are exporting reliability and a promise that the partner can count on our timing and quality.”
During the discussion that followed the broadcast, staff shared concrete memories of recent assignments: a midsize warehouse in South America completed within a tight schedule; an assembly hall in Southeast Asia where Meituo engineers guided local teams through erection steps; and a pilot renovation of older buildings replaced by efficient steel frames. These stories, practical and granular, are the kind of outcomes the team connects to the day’s lessons about cooperation and sacrifice.
The mood in the room shifted from solemn to quietly determined. “Watching together builds a shared sense of purpose,” said HR coordinator Chen Min. “It also reminds us that every contract, every delivery, ties back to people’s livelihoods.” The Foreign Trade Department reiterated its commitment to honesty in bidding, clarity in documentation, and responsiveness on site — standards that underpin successful steel structure workshop and warehouse projects.
Beyond business, the company framed the morning as a cultural moment: signing a commemorative banner, leaving short notes of appreciation for veterans, and circulating a reading list about the period. Small acts, staff said, but meaningful — they connect the technical language of drawings and bills of lading to broader civic duty.
As the event closed, Zhang Hui looked at his colleagues and said plainly, “We export buildings, but we also export trust. If we remember why peace matters, we will work differently — with care, with patience, with an eye on long-term partnerships.” For Shenyang Meituo, the Sept. 3 viewing was therefore both a tribute and a renewal: a quiet vow to carry national history into daily practice, one reliable steel structure building at a time.