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Off the Beaten Path in Shanghai
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Off the Beaten Path in Shanghai

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Building of Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao Day Time - Shanghai
Building of Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao Day Time
by imstress
Tips and photos of unusual, out-of-the-way Shanghai attractions, posted by real travelers and locals.
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Take the ferry at sunset...
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  • Take the ferry at sunset across the river to Pudong. It last's only some minutes, but you get a beautiful view along the riverside and you rub shoulders with the locals, coming from or going to work. On the Pudong side, find the bus going to the Oriental Pearl Tower. Going back, you may take the new subway. Look out for the last train, the service stops early.

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    try the botanical garden and...
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  • try the botanical garden and zoo near the airport,it is really very big and you will find a lot of different species of tropical plants (shanghai has a very low latitude),and a marvellous bamboo forest

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    Shanghai Introduction...
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  • Shanghai Introduction
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Throughout the past century, Shanghai has had numerous name tags attached to it; the 'whore of the East', the 'Paris of the Orient' and the 'Pearl Of China'. Images of Shanghai more than any other Chinese city, are bountiful in the west. A visit here therefore, is naturally tainted to some extent, with a preconception of how the city will be.

    As the largest and most prosperous city in the nation, Shanghai is the economic, financial and cultural center of China, where Beijing is the political heart. And this image of Shanghai as a fast and modern metropolis is certainly the one that most visitors take away. Those old preconceptions of Shanghai as the home of crime vice and prostitutes are wiped away, as the city successfully projects an image of itself as young, vibrant and cool.

    Shanghai is a modern and fast paced city, rich in history and culture and with a wealth of areas and sites just waiting to be explored. One of the nicest aspects of Shanghai is that the crowds here are much more manageable than in a city like Beijing. This is largely because there are no great ancient sites which people flock too. Rather, this is a city to be walked, wandered, explored and discovered in your own time and, in your own style.

    What makes Shanghai particularly attractive are the many different styles of architecture and design throughout the city. Shanghai was once divided up into different 'Concessions' or districts and the boundaries of these areas still remain today.The famous, Bund was home to the 'British Public Park' and this boulevard has a plethora of colonial structures to visit, all reminders of Shanghai's days of decadence. The Japanese and the French Concessions too, are fascinating areas to explore. The French quarter is a particularly charming district to wander, and there are many former residences to look at and discover something about old Shanghai and the people who lived here. The area known as the 'Chinese City' is also worthy of a visit. Take a break from the tourists around the Yuyuan and do some serious antique shopping or just lose yourself amidst the old alleys and streets.

    But perhaps most of all today, Shanghai is a spectacularly modern city. The pace of development here is unbelievable. Currently, seventeen percent of the world's cranes are in the city and developers boast that the city is changing at a rate incomparable to anywhere else in the world ever. The newest area of the city, Pudong, has just celebrated its 10th anniversary and is almost unrecognizable from the way it was when development began here. Two of the most impressive city structures can be found here, the Jinmao Tower and the Oriental TV Tower.

    For any visitor to China, perhaps the most attractive thing about this city is just how fashionable it is. Museums, galleries, restaurants and bars have emerged in the past few years. This cosmopolitan cultural scene which harks back to the heydays of the 1920s and 30s and the new found wealth in the city are helping to reinvent Shanghai as a place with a fabulous and optimistic style and attitude.

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    Don't miss the back yard of...
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  • Don't miss the back yard of THE THIGER HILL. The poet Su Dongpo once remarked. 'It is a loss to visit Suzhou without seeing the Tiger Hill'

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    THE TIGER HILL It was named...
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  • THE TIGER HILL
    It was named the Tiger Hill from the legend that a white tiger appeared crouching on the hill three days after the burial of the King He Lu of Wu State in the Spring and Autumn Period.
    Ticket:35RMB

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    HANGZHOU: Although it is not...
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  • HANGZHOU: Although it is not off the beaten path, it is a little out of the way for people visiting Shanghai. Hangzhou is well worth a visit if you have a day or two to spare, as Shanghai tends to get a little crazy at time, and Hangzhou is much more quiet. You can check out the separate Hangzhou page....

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    Here is Zhouzhuang.In Shanghai...
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  • Here is Zhouzhuang.In Shanghai Stadium,there are shuttles from Shanghai to Zhouzhuang.
    Take Metro No.1 or Pearl Line to Shanghai Stadium.

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    Wandering aroung the back streets
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    A little architectural quirk
    If you are in People's Square, look to the south-east corner, where there is a tall non-descript thin, modern skyscraper - Harbour Ring Plaza. It's a slightly odd shape and clad in silver panels lower down.
    It's not widely known that this is designed by the same studio that designed most of the classic huge buildings along the Bund, including the Peace Hotel.
    The architectural studio of Palmer & Turner designed most of the Bund 'greats' but left Shanghai after the Communist Revolution. They continued in Hong Kong and returned to Shanghai in the 1980s. The first building designed on their return was Harbour Ring Plaza.
    Just wanted to share that little snippet with you!

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    take in the sounds of LuXun park
    Saturdays at LuXun park...singing, card playing, dancing, more people singing, exercise competitions by the very old and very young. There are boats to rent for a short cruise on the lake for a fee, blow-up slides for the kids and a small carousel and other rides for young kids from between 5-10 rmb per ride. Entrance to the park is free. Built in 1950, it has quaint bridges, rockeries and mature foliage. Lots of places to hide away on a park bench or on a rock by the stream. There are lots of people there, so you are never alone, but it's beautiful and small enough that you don't walk have to walk for hours to see the whole thing. The funniest part was one plaza where a dozen people had set up their karaoke machines and were trying to out sing each other on their microphones. My kids and I enjoyed watching the 60-70 year old men doing tricks on the bars. My 9 year old son had an adlib competition with similar aged Chinese girl doing pull-ups on the bar. With our 6 kids we were still mobbed everywhere we went. It is not a touristy spot though, and we were not being constantly asked to buy things. It was a beautiful walk in the park. I'm so sorry I didn't take my camera.

  • Phone: 801-756-9795
  • Website: photosbyfiona.com
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