With the eastward movement of the heavy rain echoes, the intense rainfall and severe convective weather in Liaoning largely ended on July 15. Shenyang's metro services are gradually returning to normal. Assessments confirmed that Sihao Street Station on Line 1 and the entire Line 9 have resumed operations. The A and D entrances of Shengli South Street Station on Line 9 remain temporarily closed due to earlier water impact. On Line 10, the flooded track area between Xianggong Street Station and Huaihe Street Shenyi Second Hospital Station has not yet been cleared to safe levels, prompting operational changes: a single-line two-way service runs from Dingxiang Lake Station to Xianggong Street Station, a short-turn service operates from Huaihe Street Shenyi Second Hospital Station to Zhangshabu Station, and a bus bridge connects the affected section.
For buses, as of 18:00 on July 14, full route inspections and vehicle checks had been completed, allowing 43 routes that meet safety conditions to resume, including No. 244, Huan 1, Huan 2, No. 262, and others. In addition, branch line 241 and route 135 are running in interval service mode.
Tourist attractions are also reopening. On July 15, 64 A-level scenic spots in Shenyang resumed receiving visitors.
The Shenyang Flood Control and Drought Relief Headquarters Office issued a post-rain safety advisory. Although the continuous heavy rainfall has stabilized, the soil remains highly saturated, river levels are receding slowly, and secondary hazards such as landslides and levee failures persist. The public and relevant units are urged to remain vigilant, carefully check for risks, and focus on six major threats: geological disasters like landslides, collapses, and debris flows; levee piping and seepage that could lead to breaches; recurring waterlogging in low-lying areas and underpasses, with caution for missing manhole covers and underground currents; potential collapse of old and temporary buildings after saturation, requiring prompt evacuation; risks of foundation pit collapse and ground subsidence at construction sites; and electric shock hazards from submerged power lines and distribution boxes.