About Glodon
Glodon, officially Guanglianda Technology Co., Ltd., is a leading Chinese construction software company that offers digital building solutions across the full lifecycle of engineering and construction projects. Its products include cost estimation and quantity takeoff tools, BIM-based design and construction management platforms, digital procurement, and cloud-based collaboration services used by developers, contractors, designers, consultants, and material suppliers. The company brands itself as a “digital building platform service provider,” with solutions spanning digital design, digital cost, digital construction, and related information services. ([glodon.com](https://www.glodon.com/introduction))
A charge labeled “GUANGLIANDAZ84” on a card statement is likely related to a purchase or renewal of Glodon software or cloud services, such as engineering cost software, BIM tools, or associated data and service platforms. This might be a one-time license or module purchase, a recurring subscription fee for SaaS products, training or technical services, or usage of Glodon’s online platforms (for example, digital cost, data, or project management services). Enterprises may see such charges processed from China and possibly denominated in CNY, which can cause minor foreign-exchange differences on statements.
To verify or resolve questions about this charge, the cardholder should first check any Glodon/Guanglianda accounts they or their company use, including software license centers, cloud service portals, or invoices from a local reseller or branch. Within China, Glodon provides national service hotlines and online support channels; internationally, customers can use the contact details provided on glodon.com, including regional offices and distributors. If a charge is not recognized, the user should search email for Glodon/Guanglianda order confirmations, check with their company’s finance or IT/procurement department, and, if still unresolved, contact Glodon support with the transaction date and amount. As a final step, the card-issuing bank can dispute the transaction if it appears unauthorized.