The building is the first of two towers that will serve as the gateway to a 200-hectare new central business district in downtown Haikou, capital of the island-province of Hainan in southern China.

The project is being constructed by HNA Group [HNAIRC.UL], the widely scrutinized and highly leveraged aviation-to-financial services conglomerate that got its start in Hainan 25 years ago as a regional airline with just two aircraft.

But HNA is now looking to shed at least some of its sprawling interests in the huge 100 billion yuan ($15.84 billion) business district, as it has done with many of the interests the company has amassed in a $50 billion global spending spree.

HNA is currently in talks with potential "strategic partners" for parts of the development, which a range of investors also have stakes in, according to sources familiar with the situation, even as it prepares to re-organize its operations and shrink its workforce.

The search for investors in HNA's hometown underlines the difficulties the company is facing as it struggles under the weight of the debt it racked up during its rapid expansion.

HNA told major bank creditors in January that it faced a potential cash shortfall of at least 15 billion yuan in the first quarter.

In the last two months, HNA has sold more than $6 billion in prime real estate in Australia, New York and Hong Kong, while selling shares in Deutsche Bank, Park Hotels & Resorts (>> Park Hotels & Resorts Inc), and Hilton Grand Vacations Inc (>> Hilton Worldwide Holdings).

On Monday, HNA Infrastructure Investment Group (>> HNA Infrastructure Invstmnt Grp Co Ltd), one of the key developers of the Haikou business district, said it would sell a Hainan-based property company and logistics unit to Sunac China, a real estate developer, for 1.9 billion yuan.

When asked for comment on the stake sales, the company said in a statement that "HNA is always looking for trusted partners".

The master plan for the Haikou business district includes 23 office buildings, residential compounds, and a massive luxury shopping mall. The first of the Haikou Twin Towers, 94-floors high, is scheduled to open in 2020, and will include a St. Regis Hotel.

Anchored in the center of the district is the Hainan provincial government, with HNA's headquarters, a Buddha-shaped tower, sitting just down the road.

A COMPANY ISLAND

Hainan is in many ways an HNA company island. HNA Group operates 92 enterprises across the province, employing 30,000 workers, with total assets of nearly $50 billion. It is Hainan's biggest money maker, with total revenues outstripping the combined sales of the province's next nine largest companies combined.

HNA is also critical to local government efforts to establish Hainan as a regional and global tourist destination.

The group operates the island's three commercial airports and its flagship Hainan Airlines operates 17 international and regional routes from the province and transports about 45 percent of all visitors arriving by air here.

The company is currently investing 15.3 billion yuan for a second runway and terminal for Haikou's international airport, part of an expansion to accommodate 35 million visits by 2025.

The branded tailfin of Hainan Airlines, which travels to 110 cities worldwide, has elevated the province's name around the world, said Edward Tse, chief executive of Gao Feng Advisory Company, who previously advised Chinese companies at Booz & Company and Boston Consulting Group.

"HNA is a business card for Hainan province," Tse said.

Hainan's governor, Shen Xiaoming, who visited HNA's Haikou headquarters in November just as the severity of the company's financial struggles emerged, underscored the importance of the group to the province's development.

"HNA took root in Hainan, understands Hainan, implemented a new development concept in Hainan, and built a modern economic system in Hainan," Shen said. "If HNA is good, then Hainan is good; when Hainan is good, then HNA is better."

GOVERNMENT CLEAN-UP

HNA and other non-state conglomerates in China have meanwhile been under intensifying pressure from Beijing to clean up operations and deleverage their businesses.

In recent weeks, Chinese regulators have taken control of Anbang Insurance Group. The government is also investigating the chairman of CEFC, which has agreed to take a $10 billion stake in the Russian oil major Rosneft.

HNA executives have recently elevated their patriotic rhetoric and have tethered company goals closely to those of Beijing.

HNA Capital, for instance, announced on Feb 27 that it was helping to raise 20 billion yuan to help fund projects along China's new Silk Road trade initiative.

HNA's cause is the "cause of the party, the cause of the people and the cause of all mankind", Chen Feng told HNA's Communist Party members on Feb 7, according to a company report.

HNA's co-chairman, Wang Jian, voiced a darker message, telling employees that the company's difficulties were the result of a "major conspiracy" against the party and President Xi Jinping by foreign and domestic "reactionary forces", according to an internally-distributed email.

China's leading industrial conglomerates and technology companies all have Communist Party committees, and such rhetoric is not unusual now, said Tse of Gao Feng Advisory.

OFFICIAL SUPPORT

At the same time, HNA is engaged in a wrenching reorganization of both its domestic and overseas businesses.

Other foreign assets involved in the group-wide debt reduction program include a 29.5 percent shareholding in the Spanish hospitality firm NH Hotel Group that is up for sale, and the Swiss airline services firms Gategroup and Swissport, which are being prepared for listings.

At home, HNA is undertaking a massive reorganization of its businesses, which include aviation, tourism, healthcare, technology and financial services assets.

Still, repayment of group borrowing, which surged by more than one-third over the first 11 months of last year to 637.5 billion yuan, has been exacerbated by liquidity issues, including the inability to pay a 3 billion yuan aviation fuel bill owed to China National Aviation Fuel Group Ltd by its airlines.

However, the company appears to be getting crucial official support to help it survive, even if it's unlikely to receive a direct government lifeline.

Hainan's vice governor, Mao Chaofeng, told Reuters in Beijing last week that the province wouldn't need to intervene, given the quality of HNA's assets. The State Council Information Office, which acts as the public relations arm of the Chinese government, declined to comment.

HNA has since the end of the year received credit from leading state banks, including Citic Bank, which in February extended the group a 20 billion yuan facility.

Also in February, HNA Infrastructure announced it had obtained a 7.8 billion yuan loan issued by China Development Bank, and the Hainan branches of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Agricultural Bank of China, to help complete its work on Haikou's international airport.

HNA also has been leaning on the more than 100 strategic relationships it has with provincial, municipal and local governments across the country, while pursuing fresh regional cooperation deals.

For example, in the northern municipality of Tianjin, where it employs nearly 10,000 workers and operates a regional airline and cargo facilities, HNA is working with the government to create an international shipping center.

These deals have helped HNA gain crucial credit support from regional banks.

They also underline the extent to which the survival of the sprawling behemoth is important to regional governments, and Beijing.

For China, the stakes are high, said William Kirby, a professor at Harvard Business School who has authored a case study on HNA.

"It's reputationally important for China to get this right," Kirby said. "At the end of the day, HNA needs to be deemed a successful Chinese and international company."

(Reporting By Matthew Miller; Editing by Philip McClellan)

By Matthew Miller