Kínai 1. osztály 11/21 07:30 14 [5] Beijing Renhe v Jiangxi Liansheng [6] D 1-1
Kínai 1. osztály 11/18 07:30 14 [6] Jiangxi Liansheng v Beijing Renhe [5] L 2-1
Kínai 1. osztály 11/08 06:30 5 [1] Guizhou Hengfeng Zhicheng v Beijing Renhe [5] L 3-0
Kínai 1. osztály 11/04 11:35 4 [6] Beijing Renhe v Sichuan Jiuniu [2] W 3-2
Kínai 1. osztály 11/01 07:00 3 [5] Xinjiang Tianshan v Beijing Renhe [6] D 1-1
Kínai 1. osztály 10/29 11:35 2 [5] Beijing Renhe v Shenyang Urban [5] L 2-3
Kínai 1. osztály 10/25 11:35 1 [3] Peking Sport - egyetemi FC v Beijing Renhe [3] L 3-0
Kínai 1. osztály 10/14 07:30 10 [2] Beijing Renhe v Taizhou Yuanda [3] L 1-2
Kínai 1. osztály 10/11 11:35 9 [6] Nei Mongol FC v Beijing Renhe [3] D 0-0
Kínai 1. osztály 10/08 08:00 8 [3] Beijing Renhe v Peking Sport - egyetemi FC [4] W 3-2
Kínai 1. osztály 10/04 07:00 7 [6] Suzhou Dongwu v Beijing Renhe [3] W 0-2
Kínai 1. osztály 09/30 11:35 6 [5] Beijing Renhe v Chengdu Better City [1] W 3-2
Kínai 1. osztály 09/26 07:30 5 [2] Taizhou Yuanda v Beijing Renhe [3] L 1-0
Kínai 1. osztály 09/23 11:35 4 [3] Beijing Renhe v Nei Mongol FC [5] L 1-2
Kínai 1. osztály 09/19 07:30 3 [4] Peking Sport - egyetemi FC v Beijing Renhe [3] W 0-1
Kínai 1. osztály 09/16 11:35 2 [4] Beijing Renhe v Suzhou Dongwu [5] W 1-0
Kínai 1. osztály 09/12 11:00 1 Chengdu Better City v Beijing Renhe L 3-2
Kínai Szuperliga 12/01 07:00 30 [10] Dalian Yifang v Beijing Renhe [16] L 2-0
Kínai Szuperliga 11/27 11:35 29 [16] Beijing Renhe v Shanghai SIPG [3] D 1-1
Kínai Szuperliga 11/23 07:30 28 [16] Beijing Renhe v Jiangsu Suning FC [5] L 2-3
Kínai Szuperliga 11/01 07:30 25 [16] Beijing Renhe v Guangzhou R&F [13] L 1-4
Kínai Szuperliga 10/27 07:30 27 [14] Tianjin Tianhai v Beijing Renhe [16] D 2-2
Kínai Szuperliga 10/20 07:30 26 [9] Tianjin Teda v Beijing Renhe [16] L 1-0
Kínai Szuperliga 10/13 11:35 24 [16] Beijing Renhe v Chongqing Lifan [10] L 1-4
Kínai Szuperliga 08/14 11:35 22 [16] Beijing Renhe v Hebei CFFC [13] L 1-2
Kínai Szuperliga 08/09 12:35 23 [11] Henan Jianye v Beijing Renhe [16] L 2-1
Kínai Szuperliga 08/02 11:35 21 [15] Shenzhen v Beijing Renhe [16] D 1-1
Kínai Szuperliga 07/28 11:35 20 [1] Guangzhou Evergrande v Beijing Renhe [16] L 3-0
Kínai Szuperliga 07/21 10:00 19 [16] Beijing Renhe v Shanghai Shenhua [13] L 1-4
Kínai Szuperliga 07/17 11:35 18 [2] Beijing Guoan v Beijing Renhe [16] L 2-1

Beijing Chengfeng Football Club (Chinese: 北京橙丰; pinyin: Běijīng Chéngfēng) was a professional Chinese football club that last participated in the Chinese League One under licence from the Chinese Football Association (CFA). The team was based in Fengtai District, Beijing and their home stadium was the Beijing Fengtai Stadium that has a seating capacity of 31,043. Their last majority shareholder was Chinese property developers of shopping centers Renhe Commercial Holdings Company Limited.

The club was founded in Pudong District, Shanghai on 3 February 1995 and were originally known as Shanghai Pudong before they made their debut in the third tier of China's football league pyramid in the 1995 season. They would work their way up to the top tier while changing name to accommodate their sponsors. In the 2006 season the club would relocate the team to Shaanxi and rename themselves Xi'an Chanba International, however by the 2012 season, the club relocated this time to Guizhou, and changed their name to Guizhou Renhe. In the 2016 season the club relocated the team to Fengtai District, Beijing, and changed their name to Beijing Renhe. Throughout the club's history their greatest achievement has been winning the 2013 Chinese FA Cup while the highest position they have ever finished was second within the 2003 season.

History

logo of Shanghai Pudong Football Club in 1995

The club was founded on 3 February 1995 in Pudong District, Shanghai to take part in the recently formed fully professional football league system and they started at the bottom of the football pyramid in the third division, where they named themselves Shanghai Pudong. Playing in all blue in their debut season, they would immediately taste success when they won the division title and promotion to the second tier. The following seasons, however, saw the team languish within the division until they brought in Xu Genbao to manage the side at the beginning of the 2000 season and would make the club promotion contenders. Under Xu Genbao's leadership, they didn't have to wait long to win promotion when they would go on to win the division title at the end of the season and a chance to play in the top tier. Under the ownership of Shanghai Yungtay Engineering and COSCO Real Estate, the club rebranded themselves with a new blue and white striped football kit. They were big spenders who wanted to achieve immediate success by bringing in established Chinese internationals such as Cheng Yaodong, Jiang Jin and particularly Wu Chengying who set a Chinese transfer fee record of 13,000,000 RMB. This saw them become genuine title contenders and under their new manager Cheng Yaodong, they would fight for the league title with Shanghai Greenland Shenhua and only come second by a single point at the end of the 2003 season. On 13 June 2012, it was discovered by the police the real reason the team lost the 2003 title was because the club's players Shen Si, Qi Hong, Jiang Jin and Li Ming took a bribe from former Tianjin TEDA general manager Yang Yifeng to lose their 30 November 2003 game, which saw all offending participants fined and jailed for their crimes.

logo of Shanghai Yungtay Football Clubin 2005

The owners could not maintain the level of spending that they had done and the team's results would start to slip. Finding that they could not compete with Shanghai Shenhua and in the 2005 season, they had to face additional competition in Shanghai Zobon, the team decided to move to Xi'an after months of speculation. With the newly branded team known as Shanghai International, they would start to move away from the previous Yuanshen Stadium in Shanghai to the Shaanxi Province Stadium in Xi'an, Shaanxi Province and rename themselves Xi'an Chanba International by 2006. In 2007, their ownership was transferred to Baorong Investment and it was during this period that the club would start to experiment with a new yellow football kit. This would surprisingly seem to work when the club looked as if they were title contenders once more during the 2008 season, however their title hopes quickly faded and the team eventually finished fifth. The following season, however, would see the team languish near the bottom of the table and Cheng Yaodong decided to resign, which would see former Chinese national football coach Zhu Guanghu come in and guide the team away from the relegation zone.

At the beginning of the 2010 season, Dai Yongge and the Renhe Commercial Holdings Company started to invest heavily within the club. This would see the club bring in Chinese internationals Sun Jihai, Zhao Xuri, Qu Bo and Mao Jianqing into the team. However, despite the signings, the club struggled within the league and Zhu Guanghu left the club while three time Chinese league winner Milorad Kosanović replaced him. Milorad Kosanović's reign at the club was unsuccessful and he was soon replaced by Slobodan Santrač. After a poor string of results, Slobodan Santrač was fired and former Chinese international manager Gao Hongbo came into the club while it languished in mid-table throughout much of the 2011 season. After another disappointing season, Dai Yongge would start to get frustrated at the team's lack of success and decided to take advantage of Guiyang's government promise of the recently developed Guiyang Olympic Centre for the club, and with Renhe Commercial Holdings Company having better business connections within Guiyang, the club decided that it would move the team, which has recently made them one of the best supported teams in China. The 2012 season saw Guizhou have a successful year, with the club achieving fourth place and gaining entry into its first AFC Champions League.

The team's success continued as they qualified for the 2014 AFC Champions League as well, but got knocked out in the group stage both times they qualified. Their top achievements in this period included winning the 2014 Chinese FA Super Cup and the 2013 Chinese FA Cup. In the 2015 season they were relegated to the League One, but the team managed to advance back to the Super League in 2018. In 2016 they moved from Guizhou to Beijing, becoming Beijing Renhe. After one season where they placed eighth, in 2019 the club struggled to win games and found themselves in last place with a few rounds to go.

Having lost their 2020 China League One relegation play-off matches 2–3 on aggregate to Jiangxi Liansheng, Beijing Renhe were relegated to the League Two. They changed their name to Beijing Chengfeng to meet Chinese Football Association's "neutral name" requirement, before the dissolution of the club on 29 March 2021.

A Beijing Renhe Football Club egy kínai labdarúgócsapat, amelynek székhelye Pekingben található. A klubot 1995-ben alapították, és jelenleg a Kínai Szuperligában szerepel. A Renhe hazai mérkőzéseit a Pekingi Munkásstadionban játssza.

A klub legsikeresebb időszaka a 2000-es évek közepén volt, amikor három alkalommal is megnyerte a Kínai FA-kupát (2003, 2004, 2005). A Renhe 2005-ben az Ázsiai Kupagyőztesek Kupájának döntőjébe is bejutott, ahol azonban vereséget szenvedett a libanoni Al-Nejmeh csapatától.

A Renhe az elmúlt években anyagi nehézségekkel küzd, és több alkalommal is közel állt a megszűnéshez. A klub 2018-ban kiesett a Kínai Szuperligából, és jelenleg a másodosztályú Kínai Ligában szerepel.

A Renhe legismertebb játékosai közé tartozik a kínai válogatott volt szövetségi kapitánya, Gao Hongbo, valamint a brazil csatár, Elkeson.