Friday, February 27, 2009

Guangzhou Travel Guide


Guangzhou, the South Gate of China, is a prosperous metropolis full of vigor.
Guangzhou is the capital city of Guangdong, and the center of its political, economic, scientific, educational and cultural life. Sui (Ears of Rice) is short for Guangzhou and the City of Ram (Yang Cheng) is also an alias of Guangzhou. The kapok is the city flower and the kapok tree is the city tree of Guangzhou.
Guangzhou is located in the middle south of Guangdong Province, north of the Pearl River Delta. It lies close to the South China Sea, Hong Kong, and Macau. Zhujiang (The Pearl River), the third largest river of China, runs through Guangzhou and is navigable to the South China Sea. Situated in such an excellent geographical region, Guangzhou is called China's South Gate.
Covering an area of 7434.4 square kilometers (2870 square miles), Guangzhou is home to more than 11 million people, including a 3.7 million transitory population. With the opening of China to the outside world, a large number of people from other regions of China swarmed into Guangzhou, one of the first 'open' cities in China. This has accelerated its economic development.
Guangzhou is a famous historical city. In ancient days, Guangzhou was the capital city for three Chinese dynasties: the Nan Yue (South Yue), the Nan Han (South Han) and the Nanming (South Ming). Thus it was put in the list of the 24 most famous historical cultural cities and became a tourist destination. You can not understand most Chinese cities deeply until you know their history. This is true of Guangzhou. Many historic sights: the Western Han Nanyue King's Tomb Museum, the Zhenhai Tower and the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall tell us the 2,000-year history of Guangzhou.

Today, Guangzhou retains its ancient customs, but is also a large city full of vigor and current fashions. You can find something worth taking home in Shangxia Jiu Lu, Beijing Lu and Di Shi Fu Lu.
Trying Yue Cai (Cantonese Cuisine), one of eight Chinese famous cuisines, is definitely a must in Guangzhou! Eat delicious food with ingredients you have never heard of.
Hotel facilities and service in Guangzhou are fine. A word of warning: Do make a reservation beforehand if you decide to visit Guangzhou during the Canton Fair. For visitors, especially those plan to attend the Canton Fair, transportation in Guangzhou is more and more convenient. You can choose plane, train, ship or bus.
Guangzhou is famous as a hometown for overseas Chinese. It boasts the largest population of overseas Chinese people. These overseas Chinese do a great deal of good for Guangzhou: opening international markets, bridging Guangzhou and the rest of the world, and establishing many schools, hospitals, nurseries, kindergartens and rest homes in Guangzhou.

Horse Racing Experiencing



Hong Kong is a fashion and magic city. It has world-class buildings, the quick-pace life and all kinds of the entertainment facilities. Besides shopping in the malls, having fun in the Ocean Park and Disneyland, today we would like to lead you to have a special horse racing tour.
There are two racecourses in Hong Kong: Happy Valley Racecourse and Sha Tin Racecourse. The Happy Valley Racecourse is the first racecourse in Hong Kong, which was built by filling up a swamp, and the first Race Meeting was held in 1846. From then on, it was held every year till now. In 1978, Hong Kong Jockey Club built a new world-class racecourse, the Sha Tin Racecourse, and it has a seating capacity of 80,000 people. Towards the stand, there is a huge color screen which is the largest outdoor screen in the world.
The Happy Valley Racecourse is located in Happy Valley, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong Island. You can get there by MTR, Causeway Bay Station, A Exit, walking along the Canal Road towards South for about 15 minutes. In the second floor of Happy Valley stand, Hong Kong Horse Racing Museum is located there (Opening time: 10:00 - 17:00 from Tuesday to Sunday; if it happens to meet the racing event, the museum will be closed at 12:30).
The Sha Tin Racecourse is located in New Territories. You can take the Kowloon Canton East Rail from Kowloon Tong Station, and stop at the racecourse. Tel: +852 2966 8111.
Nothing beats the thrills of the hose-racing in Hong Kong - a passionately followed sport. From September to the next June is the house-racing season and the event is available twice-weekly. If you want to attend the race meeting to feel the tension of the exciting race or have the enjoyment of betting, you can take the Come Horse Racing Tour which is held by Hong Kong Jockey Club. In this tour, you can enjoy the special treats of pick-up service, English-speaking guide and abundant buffet lunch with a range of beverage options, like appointed wine, local beer, orange juice and soda pop and enjoy a discount price in the souvenir shops. The Come Horse Racing Tour is also available between September and the next June. The duration of the tour is about 6 to 7 hours and the price range is from HK$490.00 - HK$790.00 per person. If you are interested in it, you can consult the number + 852 2366 3995 or +852 2368 7111 for detailed information.

Hong Kong Hotel List (5 Star)




The Park Lane Hotel, Hong Kong
310 Gloucester Road, Causeway Bay,Hong Kong, China,Area: Causeway Bay
Direction: The Park Lane Hong Kong is a luxurious, first-class hotel situated right in the heart of vibrant Causeway Bay, with spectacular views of Victoria Park, Hong Kong's largest park, and the famous Hong Kong harbour.
Surrounding: Victoria Park, Hong Kong Harbour
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Airport area
Direction: is connected directly to the passenger terminal of Hong Kong International Airport by an enclosed, air-conditioned linkbridge.
Surrounding: Hong Kong Island
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

4 Hotel Photos
Area: Causeway Bay
Direction: located opposite Victoria Park in the heart of Causeway Bay, Hong Kong's thriving business, entertainment and shopping district.
Surrounding: Hong Kong Island
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Tsim Sha Tsui
Direction: It is a luxury Hong Kong hotel strategically located in Harbour City, Kowloon within easy access of a great selection of Hong Kong's finest shopping outlets and close to the city's numerous attractions. * Airport: 35 km
Surrounding: Kowloon Park, the Hong Kong Museum of Art, the Space Museum, The Hong Kong Cultural Centre, Harbour city
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Causeway Bay
Direction: It is in the heart of the entertainment, business and shopping district, with spectacular views over Victoria Harbour.
Surrounding: Causeway Shopping Centre, Victoria Harbour
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Hong Kong Disneyland
Direction: It is located in the Hong Kong Disneyland.
Surrounding: Hong Kong Disneyland
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Central
Direction: It features ideal downtown location above Pacific Place and Hong Kong Harbor.
Surrounding: Pacific Place, Hong Kong Harbor, Hong Kong Park
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Mong Kok
Direction: * Airport: 33 km * railway Station: 0.5 km
Surrounding: Ladies' Market, Temple Street, Jade Market
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: Hung Hom
Direction: Situated along the Kowloon waterfront with breathtaking views of the Victoria Harbour towards Hong Kong Island and the South China Sea.Only 5 minutes from Tsim Sha Tsui, the hotel enjoys the convenience of being in the heart of the city.
Surrounding: Culture Center, Shopping Center, Victoria Harbour
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Island Shangri-La Hotel, Hong Kong
Area: Central
Direction: It is centrally located in the heart of Hong Kong. It has direct access to Pacific Place.
Surrounding: Pacific Place
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Diners Club, JCB, Chinese Yuan

Area: New Territories
Direction: It is located within half an hour of the shopping and nightlife attractions of Tsim Sha Tsui, and a 20 minute journey by MTR from Central on Hong Kong Island.
Surrounding: Gold Coast Shopping Mall
Accepted Payment: Master, Visa, AMEX, Chinese Yuan

Hong Kong Food


Hong Kong is known as "the City of Asian Good Food", the delicacy type is many, the color, smell and tastes, the punishment are all good, known far and wide. Except the Hong Kong typical Yum Cha (tea drinking), Cantonese Meat Roasting, Dessert and Seafood, the distinctive kinds of theme restaurants will let you feel multiplex of diet charm.
SeafoodHong Kong is a island, the freshest seafood were supplied in the four seasons, in addition the exquisite cooking skills, eats the seafood in Hong Kong already is in the traveling schedule which the tourist must go. 1. Fu Yao Seafood Restaurant Address: 18# B Austin Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, KowloonTel: + 852 2368 - 8709Opening Time: 18:00 - 04:30 The restaurant is located in the Tsim Sha Tsui and near to the Hung Hom Stadium where is the famous place for pop concert, so it is also the good place to have an unexpected meeting with stars.
2. Super Star Seafood Restaurant (Hong Xing Sea Food Restaurant)Address: 83-97# Hua Yuan Building, Nathan Road, KowloonTel: + 852 2628 0339Opening Time: 10:30 - 23:30Website: http://www.superstargroup.com.hk/ Stone Fish is the most famous dish of this restaurant, and also the signature dish which must select, because the dinning time is always fully occupied, suggested makes a reservation beforehand.
Yum Cha (Tea Drinking) Yum Cha is the most characterful and popular diet. In the morning, you can choose a local tea place, order several Dum Sum and a cup of tea or coffee, is a good experience to feel the locals life.
1. Lang Ham Place Hotel Ming GeAddress: Sixth Floor, 555# Ming Hao Hotel, Shanghai Road, Mong KoK, Kowloon Tel: +852 3552 - 3300Opening Time: 11:00 - 14:30, 18:00 - 22:30You can take subway to the Mong KoK, walking out from the Exit E2, going thought the Langham Place, you will arrive at the Lang Ham Place Hotel. The Ming Ge restaurant is in the sixth floor of the hotel.

2. Lian Xiang LouAddress: #160-164 Wellington Street, Sheung WanTel: +852 2544 4556Opening Time: 9:00 - 22:00 Lian Xiang Lou restaurant is in Wellington Street, you can take subway to Sheung Wan station, walk out from the A2 Exit, go straight along the Hiller Street to the Bonham Strand East Street and turn left for about 10 minutes walking.
3. Jia Lin Ge in Peninsular Hotel Hong Kong Address: Peninsular Hotel, Salisbury Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon Tel: +852 2315 3160 Opening Time: Monday - Saturday: 11:30 - 15:00; 18:00 - 23:00; Sunday: 11:00 - 15:00; 18:00 - 23:00 Its decoration is based on the style of the old Shanghai in 20's or 30's of 20th century. Except the delicious and exquisite kinds of Dim Sum, there are more than 200 teapots made of Purple Clay Wares collections in the Tea Bar and you may nearby watch the tea ceremony perform.


Dessert: It may say that dessert is the most favorite food for most of Hong Kong people, the sesame seed sticks, the double skin milk, and the jellied bean curd, each of them is unforgettable once you have tasted. Honeymoon Dessert Main Office Address: 10C# underground, Putong Road, SaigonTel: +852 8203 6102Website: http://www.honeymoon-dessert.com/ Honeymoon Dessert is the most famous dessert restaurant in Hong Kong, it has many branches in Hong Kong Island and Kowloon, but the main office is still the most popular one. The average cost is HK$30.00 - HK$40.00 per person.
2. Sweet Dynasty Address: 88# Canton Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon Tel: + 852 2199 7799/ 2199 7788 Opening Time: Monday-Thursday: 10:00 - 24:00 Friday: 10:00 - 01:00 of next day Saturday: 07:30 - 01:00 of next day Sunday: 07:30 - 24:00 Website: http://www.sweetdynasty.com.hk/ Sweet Dynasty is located in the Canton Road, the opposite of Harbour City Shopping Mall. Its decoration is upscale, and all food material is well elected with high standard. The delicious jellied bean curd is one of the specialties of the restaurant.
3. Xu Liu Shan Address: 28# Russell Street, Causeway Bay, Hong KongTel: + 852 2832 - 9603Website: hkhls.comTransportation: F Exit of Causeway Bay Xu Liu Shan is a very famous Sweet Chain Shops in Hong Kong, you can found it everywhere. The recommend dessert is the Mango Lao Ye, Mango Budding and other Mango products. The average cost is HK$35.00 per person.
4. Yi Pin Zhai Address: 8# Heaven Street, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong Tel: +852 2577 2307 Although Yi Pin Zhai does not have the air-conditioner, is still one of the most famous sweet shops in Hong Kong from the ordinary local people to the famous movie and POP stars. Its high reputation products are the sesame seed stick, the red kidney bean paste and the jellied bean curd. Especially the "Black + White" is most the popular one and it is actually combined by the black sesame seed stick and white jellied bean curd.

One-day Luxury Central Tour


Yum Cha (tea drinking) is recommended for you to have a brunch around 10:00am (generally, a big discount is offered before 11:00am in most tea restaurants). You can try the most popular restaurant in Kowloon, Tian Bao Ge restaurant at Sheraton Hotel (Add: No.20 Nathan Road, Tsimshatsui, Kowloon, Tel: +852 2369 1111). Its opening time is 10:30 to 15:00 & 18:00 to 24:00 from Monday to Saturday and on Sunday it is half an hour earlier in the morning. The restaurant is well known for its exquisite environment and top quality dim sum.
After you get out of the Sheraton hotel, turn left to reach the Nathan Road and turn left again, walking along the Salisbury Road you will find the Bus Terminal and the Star Ferry Pier. Star Ferry started sailing from 1898, which is the first choice of all transportations between Central, Hong Kong and Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, and you can not only enjoy the amazing scenery of Victoria Harbor but also experience the great changes happened in Hong Kong during these 100 years. The journey only takes you about 8 minutes and costs HK$2.2 per adult for one way.

Upon arrival at the Pier No.7, also the Star Ferry Pier in Central, walk along the Man Yu St towards South down to the General Post Office, turn left to the Connaught Place, and at the end of this road you will reach the Statue Square, which is a Pubic Park built in the 19th century and where the statue of Victoria Queen was seated when it was built. That's the origin for its name. Later, the statue was moved to the Victoria Park in Causeway Bay. And now, the park is still very popular among local people. The HSBC Hong Kong is located beside the square. It is an outstanding modern building and looks like a robot seen from outside. The whole construction was made of the glass and steels, and it is one of the most expensive buildings in the world. Then go shopping at the IFC Mall which boasts over 200 international top brands and 31 restaurants and bars, for all tastes and all budgets.

For dinner, traditional Hong Kong cuisine would be an ideal choice. You can try the famous Yung Kee Restaurant (Address: 32-40 Wellington Street, Central, Hong Kong Tel: +852 2522 1624). After dinner, take bus No.15 from Exchange Square Bus Terminal to the station of Peak Tram to the Peak, and then take the peak tram (please take the seats of right side to make sure that you will enjoy a very beautiful night scene; ticket charge: HK$22.00 for one way and HK$33.00 for round way) to the Victoria Peak, which is the best place to enjoy the multi-colorful night views of Hong Kong Island and Victoria Harbor.

As one of the most famous sleepless cities in the world, you should not miss the unique and delightful nightlife of Hong Kong. Lan Kwai Fong, the hottest and trendiest night spot in Hong Kong, is a "MUST" place (Central Station D1, D2 Exit, along the Queen Rd Central to the D'Guilar Street, it takes you about 5 minutes' walking to get there).

Hong Kong Local Markets


This morning, let's taste the local breakfast first - soup and dim sum. We would like to recommend a famed restaurant named Fu Ji Zhou Pin with a long history of over 40 years (104-106 Garden Rt in Mong Kok, Kowloon, Tel: +852 2385 1230). Its opening time is from 07:30 to 24:00 everyday. Although the restaurant looks small and ordinary in appearance, its food is indeed luxurious with top quality. You can go there by taking subway and get out from D3 Exit in Mong Kok, walking along the Garden Rt for about 15 minutes.

Then, we will travel to the longest outdoor escalator in the world (C exit, Central Station, walking along the Jubilee Street for about 15 minutes), the Central-Mid-Levels Escalator, which runs from Central to Mid-Levels (available uphill from 10:20am until midnight). The full escalator is 800m long and takes you 20 min from the bottom to the top. There are many exits to the roads of different directions in the middle, so you can get off wherever you want. Take the escalator up to the Hollywood Road. It is the first road since Hong Kong became a port and also a compact community of early inhabitants of Chinese. There stand many antique shops and old furniture shops. The goods of this road are always expensive, but it is still attractive for most tourists especially for foreigners due to its strong customs of the orient.

From the Exchange Square, you can take bus (6, 6X, 60 or 260) to the Stanley Market. If you like, you can stop over at Aberdeen Fishing Village (home of floating population) where you will see many kinds of junks and yachts to all directions. Stanley Market is a popular tourist destination to go to haggle over everything from antiques to electric products. Along this street, there are many restaurants and bars, you can have a lunch or take a coffee break there.

In the afternoon, go back to Central by bus and take Kwun Tong Line to Mong Kok. Walking out from D3 exit and turn right, you will arrive at the famous Women's Street, the best place to buy things for women, by offering bargains on everything from jeans to jade necklaces. If you are a crazy shopper, go to the Temple St Street after 20:00 (Yau Ma Tei Station C exit). Temple St is also called as Men's Street and it is a lively night market selling cheap clothes and all kinds of little trinkets. You can also taste the traditional local flavors there, like seafood, hot pot, BBQ and etc. Sometimes, the local Cantonese Opera is performed there for free, but tips are required at the break time. Temple St. Street is a right place to experience the real life of local people.

One-day to Lantau Island


Lantau boasts as a largest island in Hong Kong, which is almost 2 times as Hong Kong Island in territory. It is a mountainous region with very limited flat area. Most of the travelers come to trace the Buddhist temples in piety in this island. What's more, it is a delectable place for a cozy promenade.

The tour begins by sailing on an air-conditioned ferry from No. 7 Port in the Central to Silvermine Bay (Mui Wo) for about 50 minutes. In the Mui Wo Bus Station, take the bus No.1 to the Cheung Sha Beach, Tai O Fishing Village. You can see many traditional shanties along the river which have gone through centuries of vicissitudes. The inhabitants there, who are called "Hakka" and fostered by the resourceful sea, make their living by fishing.

After visiting the traditional fishing village, you might take the bus No. 2 towards the Po Lin Monastery for about 40 minutes. As the prestigious bethel of Buddhism, it attracts millions of domestic and foreign travelers annually and it deserves the best gathering of temples in Hong Kong in scale and delicacy. The great bronze Buddha statue is just adjacent to the monastery, renowned as the biggest Bronze Seating Buddha in the world. It is 100 ft tall and 202 ton in weight and you need to walk up 268 steps to have a close look at this holy Buddha. The Buddha statue is a tremendous treasure inside. There are many precious historic and cultural heritages of Buddhism stored there. It is divided into Merits and Virtues Hall, Exhibition Room and the Memorial Hall, which are all free for visitors. However, if you want to enter the Memorial Hall, you need to purchase some Chinese-style vegetarian food at the entrance, which acts as a necessary attachment. From another perspective, this is a special meal in the monastery that may add some unique flavor and also is a good chance to experience the monks' life.

Take bus No. 23 to the Tung Chung Station, where you can return to Central area by subway (Optional: from the Tung Chung, you can choose Ngong Ping 360 cable car to reach the Great Buddha. On the cable car, you will have a golden opportunity to overlook the Lantau Island, which is another extraordinary experience. The admission fee for each adult: HK$58.00 for one way and HK$88.00 for round-way).

Hong Kong Disneyland Tour


When we were children, we dreamed everything wondrously new and magically real. However, when we rushed our feet all days to make a living, we are already grown-up unconsciously and even forget our dreams in childhood for a long time. Children grow up quickly, but the magic of Disneyland keeps our heart forever young. Dear friends, please follow us to have a marvelous journey in Hong Kong Disneyland Resort.
Hong Kong Disneyland Resort is located on Lantau Island and accessible with various convenient transportations.

By MTR, please take the Tung Chung Line to reach Sunny Bay and interchange the Disneyland Line to the resort. From airport, it takes you only 23 minutes (from airport to Tsing Yi, interchange Tung Chung Line to Sunny Bay and then interchange Disneyland Resort Line). From Kowloon, it takes about 30 minutes, and 33 minutes if you start from Hong Kong. It is the gateway to get the magic.

By bus, between Hong Kong and Disneyland Resort, you can take R11 or R22, which costs you about HK$38.00 net per adult. R11 runs between North Point Pier and the Disneyland Resort Public Transport Interchange (PTI) and R22 runs between You Tang and PTI. Time schedule to PTI starts at 9:00am; from PTI starts within 15 min to 45 min after the fireworks. Admission fee for normal days: HK$295.00 per adult; HK$210.00 per child (3 - 11 yrs old); HK$170.00 for senior citizen over 65 yrs-old. The child under 3 yrs-old is free of charge. Admission fee for holidays and festivals: HK$350.00 per adult; HK$250.00 per child (3 - 11 yrs old); HK$200.00 for senior citizens over 65 yrs-old.

There are four theme parks in Hong Kong Disneyland Resort: Fantasyland, Adventureland, Spaceland and American Main Street. Enjoying the adventurous thrilling rides and watch the amazing Broadway-style shows, you will find your favorite character coming into life and the fairy tales becoming reality there. When you enter the resort, take the timetable along with you, which is very helpful for you to make a well arrangement for the whole day. There are so many entertainment facilities in this resort. Now we would like to recommend some "Musts" that you should not miss.

Hong Kong Disneyland Railroad, located in the Main Street, U.S.A. is the first stop of Hong Kong Disneyland. Please take the old steam engine train from American Town to the Spaceland, you can take a general look at the whole park and experience the best transportation of old time.

"The Golden Mickeys" in the storybook theater – Fantasyland: the show lasts 30 min and is a 3D cartoon movie. You will be offered with the professional glasses to watch the movie. This 3D movie is quite lively and vivid. You might even smell the perfume of the banquet and feel the water drops of rain which are happening on the movie when you are watching. All these special and magic arrangements are the one and only in all Disneyland of the world.

If one day is not enough for you to enjoy the all, you can also choose to sleep with Mickey. Hong Kong Disneyland offers you two theme hotels: Hong Kong Disneyland Hotel (Tel: +852 3510-6000) and Disney Hollywood Hotel (Tel: +852 3510 5000). Both of the hotels are full of magic and fantastic ideas and designs. Guests can play hide-and-seek in the large Garden labyrinth, take photos with Princess Disney and seek 32 pairs of crystal shoes of Cinderella's in the huge crystal light of the hotel lobby.

Hong Kong Ocean Park



Hong Kong Ocean Park is located in Aberdeen, the south side of Hong Kong Island. It was built on both sides of the mountain and has two entrances - the Main Entrance and the Tai Shue Wan Entrance. The opening time of the park is from 10:00 to 18:00.
From Central, you can take bus (6A, 6X, 70, 75, 90, 97 and 260) from the Exchange Square Bus Terminal to the Ocean Park for about 20 minutes. After going through the Aberdeen tunnel, just follow the direction, it is a short walk to the Main Entrance. The entrance fee is HK$185.00 for adult and HK$93.00 for child under 12 years old. Ocean Park has 7 theme areas: the Park Tour, Lowland Gardens, Kids' World, Marine Land, Headland Rides, Adventure Land and Bird Paradise. Firstly, take the cable car up to the mountain. You can enjoy the spectacular views of the South China Sea during the 8 minutes' journey. Visit the Atoll Reef, you will witness the spectacular undersea world with over 5,000 fish. Try the heart-stopping action of the Dragon Roller Coaster, the Spider, the Octopus Asia's most exciting selection of the thrill-packed rides. The performances of trained dolphins and sea-lions are the highlight of the Ocean Park. Please check the show time when you enter the park and be sure to get to the Ocean Theater at least 20 minutes ahead of the show. If you do not want to get wet by the water spray made by the piquant blue whale, please choose the seat after the fifth row. For dining, you will have plenty of choices: pizza, hotdogs, BBQ and various ice-creams and drinks.

After you finish the tour in Ocean Park, you can take bus back to Central. There is another option tour for you to have a perfect ending of the day. From the Exchange Square Bus Terminal, along the ManYiu Street towards North to the end, there is a Star Ferry Pier. Take the Star Ferry to Kowloon. Upon arrival at the pier, please follow the direction to get to the Avenue of Stars (It only takes you about 5 minutes to get there). Rambling along the road, you will appreciate the beautiful night scene of Victoria Harbor and have a close touch with over 73 famous movie stars in Hong Kong, such as Bruce Lee, Jacky Chan, Maggie Zhang and etc. You can take photos with your favorite Movie Star, of course, with their bronze statue or handprint. Besides, "A Symphony of Lights" is held here every night starting at 20:00. It is a world-leading multimedia lights and music show. The "performers" are the 18 high buildings along the Victoria Harbor in Hong Kong Island. You just choose a good place and enjoy it for free.

Hong Kong Travel Guide


Hong Kong, the Oriental Pearl, is simply amazing!
It would be hard to find a more exciting city than Hong Kong. Set among beautiful natural surroundings it has all the benefits of a thriving and vibrant commercial center. Here you can find the delights of modern living alongside an abundance of reminders of its historic past. Whether you visit the better known highlights like the stunning Ocean Park, the fantastic viewpoint of Victoria Peak or the beautiful Repulse Bay, Hong Kong is certain to exceed your expectations.
Hong Kong, a Special Administrative Region of PRC, has grown from what was a simple fishing village into the world's fourth largest banking and financial center and eighth largest trading economy. Situated in the southeast corner of China, Hong Kong occupies an area of 1,104 square kilometers (about 426 square miles)and is home to more than 6,970,000 people. Most people (about 97% of the population) are Chinese and speak Cantonese and English, although Mandarin is becoming more popular in Hong Kong now. Most tourism personnel and taxi drivers can communicate with tourists in English. The most common religions are Buddhism and Christianity.
Hong Kong is made up of four parts: Hong Kong Island, Kowloon Peninsula, the New Territories and the Outlying Islands. Hong Kong Island is the center of economy, politics, entertainment and shopping. Northern Hong Kong Island is the main commercial, shopping and entertainment area; the residential area is located in Eastern Hong Kong Island; and Southern Hong Kong Island known for its sea shores and bays. Kowloon is another flourishing part of Hong Kong. Above all, Causeway Bay, Wan Chai , Tsim Sha Tsui, Yau Ma Tei and Mong Kok are the most popular areas. These areas are busy day and night, and tourists can feel secure enjoying the lively nightlife, because Hong Kong is one of the most secure cities in the world. The New Territories and Outlying Islands are ideal places to experience a peaceful and natural Hong Kong.

An open city with a wonderful natural harbor, Hong Kong is the meeting place of various cultures that blend harmoniously with Chinese traditions and exotic influences. On one hand traces of British culture can be found everywhere as a result of former colonial rule. On the other hand, Hong Kong preserves traditional customs and the core values of Confucianism that have faded in Mainland China. This is reflected in its colorful festivals ranging from Spring Festival to Christmas. Nowhere else on earth do luxury restaurants, street side food-stalls known locally as dai pai dong, grand mansions and penthouses, tenements, office blocks, wooden boats and huge liners coupled with English in a variety of accents and multifarious Chinese dialects coexist peacefully.
It is the dynamic Hong Kong that provides the environment in which the richest Chinese listed in Forbes directory do business. The city also is the backdrop for modern movies and pop music that together enjoy worldwide recognition. Home of Kongfu heroes like the late Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan, Hong Kong continues to attract more and more ambitious would-be stars and entrepreneurs.

From Yum Cha (tea and dim sum) in the morning to a moon lit view from the top of Victoria Peak or stunning night time harbor cruise, mingling with shoppers in the numerous malls and markets around Tsim Sha Tsui , tasting delicacies at dai pai dong, taking a trip in a sampan or high speed ferry, Hong Kong will guarantee its visitors an unforgettable experience. There will always be something to enchant you and quite probably make you fall in love with this unique place, be it sightseeing, shopping, dining or simply exploring its many delights by day and night.
If there is no other reason why people from the world over are so interested in this island, the answer is likely to be 'because it is there!' Don't wait any longer. Join us and explore this wonderland for yourself!

Beijing-Accomodation Guide


Grand Hyatt Beijing
Located at the heart of the city’s prestigious business and commercial district, Grand Hyatt Beijing is part of the Oriental Plaza — China’s largest commercial complex. Situated at the crossroads of Chang An Avenue and Wangfujing, it is just minutes’ walking distance from China’s most treasured spot, the Forbidden City. The 825 guestrooms and suites are designed to reflect the comfort one welcomes after a hectic day of business or sightseeing, with panoramic floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking some of the capital’s most picturesque and historic districts. Amiable living would not be complete without fine cuisine. The restaurants and lounges at Grand Hyatt Beijing offer the cutting-edge culinary excellence for which Grand Hyatt hotels are internationally renowned. Club Oasis features a resort+86 10 8518 1234-style swimming pool and a 24-hour fitness centre and also with spa pools, private massage rooms, sauna, steam rooms, solarium and whirlpool bath.
Location:40 minutes distance by car to Beijing Capital International Airport,10 minutes distance by car to Beijing Railway Station,15 minutes walking distance to the Tiananmen square

DIAOYUTAI STATE GUESTHOSE
A modern,internationalized,intelligent,comprehensive business hotel,unique for its cultural haracteristics with guestrooms,office tower,theater,restaurants, entertainment and conference facilities all combined into one. High-quality comfortable space and personalized care.Poly Plaza has 292 units of standard rooms,luxury suites,Chinese and Western superior suites and non-smoking rooms.Each of these standardized and modernized rooms provides you with luxury and comfortable surroundings.The Office Tower covers a total area of over 12,000 square meters,with advantageous offices leading the industry. Poly Plaza meet guests all over the world with smile and personalized service. A modern,internationalized,intelligent,comprehensive business hotel,unique for its cultural characteristicswith guestrooms,office tower,theater,restaur-ants,entertainment and onference facilities all combined into one.

St.Regis Hotel, Beijing
St. Regis Hotel, Beijing exemplifies the St. Regis brand legacy of elegance, service and style, distinguishing itself as the hallmark of luxurious accommodations in China. Superbly situated in the center of the business, diplomatic and shopping district, and only a few minutes away from the historical sites of the Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square, the hotel is home to Heads of State, Celebrities and CEO’s. The best five star natural hot spring water Spa in Beijing, and an excellent range of dining options, make us an unforgettable luxury destination.

Hilton BEIJING NEWS RELEASE
Unwind in the Hilton Beijing hotel's 22nd-floor Executive Lounge. Do business in one of 4 meeting rooms or the fully equipped business centre or log onto the free wireless internet access in public areas. The hotel is located in the business district, just 20 minutes from the airport and Beijing's attractions.Dine in one of 5 restaurants and bars. Enjoy Asian flavors at the Hilton Beijing hotel's 24-hour Elements restaurant, specialty coffees at Caffè Cino and creative cocktails at Zeta Bar.Play squash, keep fit in the fully equipped gym or drift away with a relaxing sauna and massage at the Hilton Beijing hotel. Discover Beijing attractions from the iconic Tian'anmen Square and red-walled Forbidden City to the Summer Palace's solace.Located in Chaoyang business district, Hilton Beijing hotel has 4 meeting rooms, an Executive Lounge, business center and wireless internet access in public areas. Stay in a Deluxe Room or a light Executive Room with Executive Lounge access. All rooms in the Hilton Beijing hotel have high-speed internet access.

SciTech Hotel
SciTech Hotel is a four-star business hotel which is located in the center of Beijing’s commercial and diplomatic district. Adjacent to the Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden City, the Ancient Observatory and the Central business District (CBD), the hotel presents an ideal combination of traditional culture and modern luxury. SciTech Hotel, together with SciTech Club, SciTech Plaza, SciTech Tower and SciTech Place, constitute a modern integrative architectural design. At SciTech Hotel, we welcome both business and leisure travelers with great hospitality. With 294 guest rooms, ranging from comfortable standard rooms to elegant duplex suites, plus business floors (F14/F15), especially designed and furnished for business travelers, SciTech Hotel ensures that a busy business itinerary is easily covered. With serene ambience, Fortune Court Chinese Restaurant, Pastels Bistro Coffee Shop and Arirang Korean Restaurant serve fine delicacies. Four function halls offer perfect venues for multipurpose gatherings, business conferences, family weddings and various ceremonies. To satisfy guests’ business needs, Business Center provides prompt and professional services: 3DDS Internet access, secretarial service, translation and interpretation, facsimile transmission, scanning, IDD service, DHL, meeting room rental service which enable you to carry on your business within a professional environment. Choose SciTech Hotel, and you will never be disappointed.

Holiday Inn LIDO BEIJING
Holiday Inn Lido Beijing was the first Holiday Inn hotel in China. Designed as a fully integrated facility, the hotel is located within the Lido Place, a commercial/residential complex that accommodates a large number of Beijing's expatriate community and multinational companies. Conveniently located 17 km from the Beijing Capital Airport, the hotel is situated near the China International Exhibition Centre, San Li Tun Embassy District, many of Beijing's famous attractions and commercial office buildings.


Hotel Kunlun
Hotel Kunlun is the proud Beijing flagship hotel of Shanghai-based Jinjiang International Hotel Management Corporation. The Hotel officially opened its doors to the public in 1989, and by 1996 had garnered recognition by two prestigious organizations: the China National Tourism Administration named Kunlun on the China's 50 Best Hotels, while the American Academy of Restaurant and Hospitality Sciences presented Hotel Kunlun with its 36th Five Star Diamond Award. Hotel Kunlun's commitment to luxury and excellence is especially evident today. In 2005, a spectacular new Lobby, as well as a well-appointed series of appropriately named Premier Deluxe Rooms, was unveiled as part of the Hotel's commitment to maintaining excellence in both facilities and in service

jinglunhotel
Opened in Sept. 1984, Jinglun Hotel is one of the earliest international joint venture four —star hotels in Beijing. It is managed by JAL Hotels Company Ltd.
The hotel is located in the cental of Beijing Business District, and adjacent to China World Trade Center, business areas and embassy quarters. It is very convenient for a business trip and to go sightseeing. The hotel is 3 kilometers and 10 minutes drive from Tian’an Men Square , and 25 kilometers 30 minutes drive t from Beijing’s Capital International Airport.


JING GUANG NEW WORLD HOTEL

THE TALLEST BUILDING IN BEIJING Jing Guang Center, the tallest building in Beijing, is an operating mansion whose modern skyscraper stretching 209 metres, some 52 storeys high with a fan shaped, blue glass facade set high amongst the white clouds of Beijing. Jing Guang Center is a joint venture complex. The partners include Hong Kong Jing Guang Development Co. Ltd. and Beijing Hua Yang Economic Exploit Co. Ltd. The Center managed by Hong Kong based New World Hotels International formally opened on June 18, 1990. New World Hotels International is a high-quality brand of hotels in Asia operated by Marriott International Inc, the world’s leading hospitality company. The Center comprises 3 sections, namely a 5 star hotel--Jing Guang New World Hotel - an office tower and deluxe apartments. The first 7 levels are public areas featuring deluxe western or Chinese restaurants and bars, banqueting, and well equipped business centre with fully furnished office space and all season swimming pool with natural SUNLIGHT and world-class heath club complex. Jing Guang New World Hotel is located between the 8th and 23rd floor with 446 guest rooms which offers the most stunning views of the city, and also provides the perfect venue for events of all sizes with our spacious Ballroom and well-equipped function rooms. Banquets, conferences, board meetings, training seminars, cocktail receptions and private dinner parties pose no feat to our professionally trained staff. The Ballroom can comfortably accommodate up to 800 guests in its 750 square metres of pillarless space. Additional function rooms contribute another 300 square metres of space and can hold up to 200 guests. Both the ballroom and the function rooms can be divided by mobile partitions for maximum flexibility. The 25th-38th floor is our office tower consisting of 20,000 square meters housing 180 tenants representing over 25 countries. The 40th to 52nd floors are 247 suite of deluxe apartments offering the most stunning views of Beijing City center. Jing Guang Center is virtually a city within a city. Step into the New World of Beijing at Jing Guang Center and experience a New World of Hospitality!
Location:Located in CBD of Beijing, 5 miles to Beijing Station, 21 miles to Capital Airport, and 5 miles to Tian’an men square.Bus Routes:Take No.9, No.729, No.112, No.115, No.118, No.846, No.855, No.859 Bus and get off at Hu Jia Lou Stop.


THE JIANGUOMEN HOTEL BEIJING

Jianguo Hotel Beijing is situated adjacent to the Beijing diplomatic quarter, in the heart of Beijing Central Business District, just 1 minute walking distance from the metro and 5 minutes walk from the famous Xiushui Market. By car, 10 minutes from Tiananmen Square and Beijing's numerous historical sights and 30 minutes from the Beijing Capital International Airport.
Bus Routes:1、4、9、37、43、48、52、28、802、120、810、703、403、930、938、728、808、特1、SUBWAY

Hutong(lanes/alleys)


What are most fascinating about the modernized Beijing are not the skyscrapers or broad streets, but the winding, secluded hutong, where there are beautiful siheyuan.
It is therefore fitting and proper to call the culture of the ancient capital ‘hutong culture’ or ‘siheyuan culture’.
Beijing used to comprise tens of thousandsof siheyuan of different sizes orderly arranged in rows. The passages between the rows were hutong.
In the Yuan Dynasty, each hutong was as wide as a large three-courtyard quadrangle. It was later divided into many nameless narrower lanes by houses built in it. Hence the saying that goes, ‘there are 3,600 hutong with names, while nameless ones are as many as the hairs on a cow’.
By 1949, there were 6,074 streets and lanes with names, among which were 1,330 hutong, 172 avenues, 111 lanes, 85 streets, 71 alleys, and 37 roads. Streets, lanes and alleys were customarily lumped together as hutong.
Beijing is crisscrossed by thousands of hutong, where there are numerous ‘sweet homes’. That is the main reason why citizens of Beijing are so much attached to them.
The slimmest hutong is Qianshi Hutong in Dashilan Area beyond the Front Gate (qianmen). The narrowest part of it measures only 40 centimeters wide. Some hutong are known for being tortuous. Beixinqiao Hutong, for instance, was said to have nine bends, but it actually had more than twenty; it was later divided into five parts. The lane beyond the Front Gate, also said to have nine bends, actually has thirteen. The names of hutong are like an encyclopedia of the city’s history and folk customs. In recent years, hutong has been developed as a precious tourist resource.
As the shabby old dazayuan (quadrangle shared by several households) are being replaced by modernized buildings, old hutong will be gone too. However, many famous hutong have been preserved as cultural relics reflecting the city’s history as an ancient capital. They are among the remnants of the past of this fast developing city.
The tour of hutong has been developed as a new sightseeing program for foreign tourists. Man-powered tricycles, a means of transport typical of old Beijing, will take them past Shichahai and Yinding Bridge to the drum tower, where they may enjoy a view of the old city crisscrossed by lanes. Then they will be taken to Houhai, where they may visit such ancient hutong as the southern and northern Guanfang Hutong, the big and small Golden Lion Hutong, and Qianhoujing Hutong. They may walk into siheyuan and chat with the inhabitants. Finally, they will be taken along Liuyin Street to the mansion of Prince Gong, known as the Garden of Grand View, to see the houses of nobles and imperial gardens.
Foreign tourists are profuse in their praise for the beauty of hutong. Carrying the age-old culture of Beijing, hutong has eternal charm

Peking Opera


Originally a form of local theatre, it spread all over the country and has become the national opera of China. About 200 years ago, the Qing Emperor Qianlong toured in southern China and developed an interest in the local operas. On his 80th birthday, he had local opera troupes to come to Beijing to perform for him. Some remained in Beijing after the celebration. The ones from Anhui and Hubei were incorporated the palace opera -Kunqu Opera- and became the Peking Opera.
Peking Opera combines stylized acting with singing, dancing, musical dialogue, martial arts, colorful facial make up and fantastic costumes. Female roles are called dan, male roles are sheng, clowns are chou. Each role, according to their sex, age and disposition, is characterized by different designs of facial make-up, such as jing representing a rough, frank character and hua lian representing a cruel or sinister character. So the audience can easily tell what kind of characters the actors are portraying. Facial make-up, costumes and head - dresses are wonderful works of traditional art.
In the past, both dan and sheng roles were played by male actors, but now they are played separately by females and males.
It is a must to see a Peking Opera while you are in Beijing, equivalent to seeing an opera if you go to Italy.
There are also some other types of operas staged in Beijing, such as Kunqu Opera, Pingju Opera and Hebei Bangzi as well as other operas from different places.

Folk Woodblock Picture


It is a kind of picture enjoying popularity among the people with a large variety. A few of them are singled out for appreciation, but most of them are used for different worldly life and protocols, such as the portrait of the Gate God, the portrait of gods, illustration, pictures for packaging and decorating, window flowers, lamp pictures, kites, paper cards, colourful squares, flags, embroidery patterns. Of these pictures some are printed in a single colour (black), some others are printed in chromatography or by the continuation of colour applying. It is a characteristic way of picture popularization from the invention of China's woodblock printing to the contemporary printing skill. Their authors are professional painter and engravers. Some of them are anonymously created by farmers.
It is spread in the north of China, and named after the village where it is produced. It originated in the Chongzhen Period of the Ming Dynasty, and flourished in the Yongzheng Period and the Qianlong Period of the Qing Dynasty. It inherits the traditional printing craft: it is coloured after the image appears on the link lines. The characters' countenances and attires are painted in lead powder in golden colour. Its sources of themes are from the Three Beauties, the Theft of the Charmed Herb, etc.

Beijng and Dynasty


As the capital city of the People's Republic of China,Beijing is the nation's political and cultural center and also a center for international contacts.
The recorded history of Beijing as a city can date back to more than 3,000 years ago. During the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (c. 11th century-771 B.C.), the Spring and Autumn Period (770-476 B.C.) and the Warring States Period (475-221 B.C.), Beijing was the capital city of the State of Yan, which was ruled by dukes or princes under the emperor. From the Qin Dynasty (221-207 B.C.) and the Han Dynasty (206 B.C.) to the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127),Beijing was a major city and also a strategic point in northern China.
When the Qidan (Khitan) people founded the Liao Dynasty (907-1125),they established Beijing, which was then under their occupation and was called Jiuzhou, as the secondary capital under the name of Nanjing (southern capital). Afterwards, the dynasties of Jin(1115-1234), Yuan (1271-1368), Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) all chose Beijing as their capital city.
In 1928, the Nanjing-based nationalist government of the Republic of China designated Beijing as the Beiping Special Municipality. In 1930, the municipality was renamed as Beiping City.
On September 27, 1949, the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference decided that the newborn People's Republic of China would base its capital in Beiping and renamed the city as Beijing.

Beijing's History



Some half a million years ago, Peking man lived in Zhoukoudian, in the southwestern suburbs of Beijing. The climate of that time was warmer and more humid than it is today. Forests and lakes in the area supported large numbers of living creatures. The fossil remains of Peking man, his stone tools and evidence of use of fire, as well as later tools of 18,000 years ago, bone needles and article of adornment from the age of Upper Cave Man are the earliest cultural relics on record in China today.
Some four to five thousand years ago, settlements to the southwest of Beijing were thriving on basic agriculture and animal husbandry. Story has it that the legendary Yellow Emperor (Huang Di) battled against the tribal leader Chiyou in the ?°wilderness of the prefecture of Zhuo.?±Zhuolu, a town west of present-day Beijing, is perhaps the site of the first metropolis in the area. Yellow Emperor??s successor, Emperor Yao, was said to have established a legendary capital Youdu (City of Quietude) that was where the city of Ji was actually built.
During the Warring States Period (475¨C221BC), the Marquis of Yan annexed the territory of the Marquis of Ji, making the city of Ji his new capital. The approximate location was north of Guang?? anmen Gate in present¨Cday Beijing near the White Cloud Temple (Baiyunguan).
Early in the third century BC, the first Emperor of Qin (Qin Shi Huang) set about conquering six states and unifying China. The city of Ji was named administrative center of Guangyang Commandery, one of 36 prefectures in China??s first feudal empire. For 10 centuries, through to the end of the Tang Dynasty (618-907), Ji remained a strategic trading and military center and the object of frequent power struggles.
Two emperors during that period -- Emperor Yang of the Sui Dynasty (581-618) and Emperor Taizong of the Tang Dynasty -- left their mark on the city. Emperor Yang amassed troops and supplies at Ji for expeditions against Korea. Emperor Taizong also used the city for military training. He built the Temple for Compassion for the Loyal (Minzhongsi), which is dedicated to troops who died in battle. This temple was the precursor of the Temple of the Origin of the Dharma (Fayuansi) located outside the old walls of the city.
At the beginning of the Tang Dynasty, Ji was little different from any other large feudal cities. Several centuries later, however, when the Tang was nearing a state of collapse, the Qidans (Khitans) came from the upper reaches of the Liaohe River and moved south to occupy Ji and make it their second capital. They called the city Nanjing (Southern Capital) or Yanjing. Emperor Taizong of the Liao Dynasty (916-1125) carried out reconstruction projects and built palaces, which were used as strongholds from which the Qidans set out to conquer the central plains of China.
In the early 12th century, the Nuzhen (Jurchen) conquered the Liao and established the Jin Dynasty (1115-1234). In 1153, Wan Yanliang moved the Jin capital from Huiningfu in present¨C day Liaoning Province to Yanjing and renamed it Zhongdu (Central Capital) as a challenge to the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279), which had its capital at Lin??an (present¨Cday Hangzhou). Before the ascension of Wan Yanliang to the throne, the city of Yanjing had changed little from the Liao period.
The rebuilding of the new city began in 1151 with expansion to the east, west and south. Palaces were constructed on a scale similar to the Northern Song (960-1127) capital at Bianliang (modern Kaifeng), and many of the actual building materials were transported from Bianliang. The new expanded city, with its splendid buildings in the center measured roughly five kilometers in circumference. The registered population of the Imperial Palace in the center measured roughly five kilometers in circumference. The registered population of Zhongdu amounted to 225,592 households, or approximately one million people.
Mongol armies occupied Zhongdu in 1215. At this time, the city of Kaiping (in present¨Cday Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region) served as the principal Mongol capital (Shangdu), while Yanjing was given provincial status. It was not until 1271 that Kublai Khan formally adopted the new dynasty??s name -- Yuan -- and made Yanjing the capital. Kublai Khan rebuilt the city and gave it the Chinese (Han) name of Dadu (Ta-tu) or Great Capital, though in Mongol it was known as Khanbalig (Marco Polo??s Cambaluc), the City of the Great Khan. When the Mongols finally eliminated the Southern Song and unified China, Dadu became the political center of the country for the first time in history.
The construction of Dadu began in 1267 and ended in 1293, extending throughout the entire period of Kublai Khan??s rule. The magnificent palaces of the Jin capital Zhongdu were destroyed by fire during the dynastic turnover from the Jin to the Yuan. When the capital was rebuilt, the original site of Zhongdu was replaced by a larger rectangular area centered in a beautiful lake region in the northeastern suburbs.
The construction of Dadu consisted of three main projects -- the imperial palaces, the city walls and moats, and the canal. The first stage was construction of the palace buildings, most of which were completed in 1274. The next stage was construction of the mansions for the imperial princes, the government offices, the Taimiao (Imperial Ancestral Temple) and Shejitan (Altar of Land and Grain) to the east and west of the palace, and a system of streets for ordinary residences. In 1293, the strategic Tonghui Canal, connecting the capital to the Grand Canal, was completed.
As the capital city of the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368), Dadu enjoyed great fame in the 13th century world. The envoys and traders from Europe, Asia and Africa who paid visits to China were astounded by the splendor and magnificence of Dadu. Marco Polo??s description of the palaces of Cambaluc, as the called Khanbalig, us most famous of all:
?°You must know that it is the greatest palace that ever was?­ The roof is very lofty, and the walls of the palace are all covered with gold and silver. They are adorned with dragons, beasts and birds, knights and idols, and other such things?­ The Hall of the Palace is so large that 6,000 people could easily dine there, and it is quite a marvel to see how many rooms there are besides. The building is altogether so vast, so rich and so beautiful, that no man on earth could design anything superior to it. The outside of the roof is all colored with vermilion and yellow and green and blue and other hues, which are fixed with a varnish so fine and exquisite that they shins like crystal, and lend a resplendent luster to the palace as seen for a great way around.?±
The new Dadu was a rectangular city more than 30 kilometers in circumference. In the later years of Kublai Khan??s rule, the city population consisted of 100,000 households or roughly 500,000 people. The layout was the result of uniform planning, the broader streets all 24 paces wide, the narrow lanes half this width. The regular chessboard pattern created an impression of relaxed orderliness.
Achievements in stone and plaster sculpture and painting at this time reached great heights. The names of two contemporary artisans have come down to us: the sculptors Yang Qiong and Liu Yuan. The latter was known for the plaster statues he created for temples. Liulansu Lane at the northern end of Fuyou Street in present-day Beijing was named after Liu Yuan.
On August 2, 1368, Ming troops seized Dadu and renamed it Beiping (Northern Peace). Zhu Yuanzhang, the founding emperor of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), however, made Nanjing his first capital. Beginning in 1406, Emperor Yongle of the Ming Dynasty spent 15 years constructing walls 12 meters high and 10 meters thick at their base around the city of Beiping. The construction of palace buildings and gardens began in 1417 and was completed in 1420. The following year, Emperor Yongle formally transferred the capital from Nanjing to Beiping and, for the first time, named the city Beijing (Northern Capital).
Extensive reconstruction work was carried out in Beijing during the first years of the Ming Dynasty. The northern city walls were shifted 2.5 kilometers to the south. Evidence of great advances in city planning is the district known as the Inner (Tartar) City. The Outer or Chinese City to the south was built during the reign of Emperor Jiajing (1522-1566), adding to the rectangular city a slightly wider ?°base?± in the south.
When the Manchus founded the Qing Dynasty in 1644, they began to build suburban gardens, the most famous of which was Yuanmingyuan. Construction over the course of an entire century, the imposing columned palaces and open-air pavilions blended with the serenity of well¨Cplanned gardens to create a masterpiece of garden architecture unrivaled in the history of China.
A city plan was first laid out in the Yuan Dynasty. Yet only after extensive reconstruction during the Ming and Qing (1644-1911), did the city emerge as an architectural masterpiece fit to serve as the capital of the Chinese empire. A north-south axis bisects the city with the Imperial Palace was knows as Danei (The Great Within). In the Ming, it was renamed the Forbidden City (Zijincheng), and more recently it has come to be called the Palace Museum (Gugong Bowuyuan). Designed with thousands of halls and gates arranged symmetrically around a north¨Csouth axis, its dimensions and luxuriance are a fitting symbol of the power and greatness of traditional China.
After the collapse of the Qing Dynasty in 1911, China fell prey to the Northern Warlords and Kuomintang, Beijing suffered the same fate as the rest of China, hobbling along like an old camel without a sense of direction. The Chinese People??s Liberation Army formally entered Beijing on January 31, 1949, opening a new chapter in the long history of the city. It was in Tian??anmen Square on October 1st, 1949, that Chairman Mao Zedong proclaimed the establishment of the People??s Republic of China, with Beijing as its capital.
The city has changed totally since then. It has expanded from its old confines within the nine gates of the Inner City wall (Zhengyangmen, Chongwenmen, Xuanwumen, Chaoyangmen, Dongzhimen, Fuchengmen, Xizhimen, Andingmen and Deshengmen) to the seven outer gates (Dongbianmen, Guangqumen, Xibianmen, Guang?? anmen, Yongdingmen, Zuoanmen and Youanmen) and out into the suburbs, Beijing now covers an area of about 750 square kilometers, which includes a dozen new living districts built on the outskirts of town.
Tian??anmen Square is still the center of Beijing, Chang?? an Boulevard now running 38 kilometers from Shijingshan in the west to Tongxian in the east. The palaces and city towers along both sides have been designated cultural relics for national protection. Former imperial residences and gardens have been opened for public viewing.
New buildings like the International Post Office and Bank of China have been built along the Second Ring Road, the former line of the Inner City wall. Old living quarters and blocks of traditional Beijing¨Cstyle buildings, such as Liulichang Culture Street, have been restored. Large¨C scale construction has been undertaken along the Third Ring Road and the fourth Ring Road.
Future development in Beijing will continue to preserve the symmetry of the old city layout while integrating modern architectural design into the over¨Call plan.

Siheyuan(quadrangle)


Siheyuan is the traditional residential compound of Beijing. Taking shape in the Liao Dynasty, it matured through the Jin, Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties to become the most characteristic residence of Beijing.
The name siheyuan means a courtyard surrounded by houses on all the four sides. Over hundreds of years, the Beijing siheyuan formed a style unique to the capital city in layout, inner structure, furnishing and decoration.
A regular siheyuan is built in a lane (hutong) running from east to west, and faces south. The four houses, with the principal one in the north, are enclosed with high walls. The main gate is opened in the southeast corner, the position of xun in the Taoist Eight Diagrams, signifying the wind. The northern house usually has three main chambers and two flanking ones; the eastern and western houses, three chambers respectively; the southern house, four chambers. There are altogether seventeen bays if the main gate and the festooned gate are included. Assuming 11 to 12 sq. m for each bay, the total area amounts to about 200 sq. m. The courtyard is spacious, containing trees, flowers, and gold fish jars. It is the center of the siheyuan, serving for passage and providing good light, ventilation and cool shades. People would like to take a rest or do the housework here.
Despite the sameness of layout, siheyuan differs in sizes. There are large, middle and small sized siheyuan.
In a small siheyuan, the northern house has three chambers, one or two of them being the main chamber(s). The eastern and western houses have two chambers respectively, and the southern house has three chambers. The houses are built with brick, and covered with a ridged tile roof. They can be inhabited by a family of three generations, with the elderly members living in the northern house and the younger ones living in the eastern and western houses. The southern house may serve as the study or the living room. In the courtyard there are brick-paved paths leading up to the steps before the doors of the houses. The main gate has two leaves coated in black lacquer, with two brass knockers on them, and a couplet pasted on both sides.
A middle siheyuan is more spacious. The northern house has three main chambers and two flanking ones. The eastern and western houses have three chambers respectively. Before each house is a corridor serving as a shelter from wind or rain. The courtyard is partitioned by a wall into a front (outer) yard and a back (inner) yard, with a moon-shaped gate in the wall. The front yard is simple, with one or two gate houses. The back yard, the living quarters, has well built houses with square-brick-paved floors and granite steps.
A large siheyuan is customarily known as‘big mansion’ (dazhaimen). The southern house may have five or seven chambers, and so does the northern one. The principal house may have as many as nine or eleven chambers. It is usually made up of several quadrangles connected lengthways. There are many courtyards, such as the front yard, the back yard, the eastern yard, the western yard, the principal yard, the flanking yards, the side yards, the study yard, the stable yard, the first row of courtyard, the second row, and the third row. The various parts of the compound are connected by corridors. The area covered is enormous. However, if the space available is inadequate, of if a full-size large siheyuan is not affordable, the southern house may be omitted.
The middle or small siheyuan was usually inhabited by ordinary people, while the large siheyuan served as the mansion of a senior official or government office.
The houses in the Beijing siheyuan are built with wood and bricks. The frameworks–purlins, columns, beams, thresholds, rafters, doors, windows, and partitions—are made of wood. The beams, columns, doors, windows and the ends of rafters are lacquered or decorated with colored paintings, holding their own against magnificent palace halls to some extent. The walls are customarily built with polished bricks and broken bricks. The roofs may be tiled, with drip-tiles below the eaves; they may also be simply covered with graphite, with no tiles at all.
The main gate usually occupies the space of a chamber. It has a complicated structure, composed of over twenty types of components, such as frames, leaves, thresholds, bolts, nails and hinges.
The main gate is usually coated in black lacquer, and may be decorated with a couplet with black characters on a red background. Behind the main gate are the festooned gate and the moon-shaped gate. The festooned gate is the most beautifully decorated of all the gates, with eaves modeled on the top of the pailou (decorated archway). It serves to divide the courtyard into two parts–an outer part consisting of the living room, the gate house, the carriage house and the stable, and an inner part, or the living quarters. The moon-shaped gate may also serve the same function if there is no festooned gate.
The festooned gate is beautifully lacquered. The ends of rafts under the eaves are in bluish green, and the wangmu in red; the round raft ends are decorated with a pattern of concentric blue, white and black circles, and the square raft ends, with golden patterns or diamond designs. The middle of the front eaves also has decorative designs. The lotus-shaped ends of the columns on both sides, with patterns carved on them, are colorfully lacquered.
The carved patterns in the siheyuan are symbols of good luck, such as the combination of the character meaning longevity and the bat (meaning happiness), the vase with a Chinese rose in it (meaning ‘peace in four seasons’), and tokens of ‘long-lasting clan’, ‘three friends in winter’, ‘riches and honor’, and ‘happiness, wealth and longevity’. They reflect old Beijing dwellers’ wish for a happy life.
Trees and flowers are planted in the siheyuan to add to its beauty. Traditionally planted are such flowers as lilacs, Chinese crabapples, flowering almonds and mountain peaches, and such trees as jujube and locust. Flowers may also be grown in flowerpots or in water.
Plants grown in flowerpots are usually pomegranate trees, oleanders, cassiabark trees, osmanthus fragans, Indian azaleas, and gardenias. Pomegranate trees are symbolic of fertility. In flowerbeds before the steps of houses are usually planted jasmines, garden balsams, morning glories, and hyacinth bean flowers.
Life in a siheyuan is described in a Qing-dynasty saying: ‘awning, fish jars, and pomegranate trees; master, fat dog, and plump maidservant’.
Though it is usually inhabited by one household, a siheyuan may also be shared by several poor households. In the case it would be called a dazayuan, of which many old Beijing dwellers cherish fond memories.

Modern Beijing


Beijing thrives today as the political and cultural capital of China as well as a center of international activity and an important socialist base. Great changes have taken place since the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949. The city walls were demolished to facilitate transportation and allow for general expansion. By 2001, the population exceeded 12.5 million, and the total municipal area was increased to over 17,800 square kilometers. The city is presently divided into 16 districts: Dongcheng, Xicheng, Chongwen, Xuanwu, Chaoyang, Haidian, Shijingshan, Fengtai, Shunyi, Changping, Mentougou, Tongzhou, Fangshan, Daxing, Huairou and Pinggu. In addition to these urban districts, the municipality is comprised of two counties: Miyun and Yanqing. Plans for future development retain the symmetrical layout of the old city on its north-south axis, extending out into the suburban districts. From Dingfuzhuang in the east to Shijingshan in the west and from Qinghe in the north to Nanyuan in the south, the overall plan covers an area of 1,000 square kilometers. A traffic network of four concentric beltways, 28 radial roads, and underground and suburban railways are being further developed to link the city center with outlying areas and surrounding towns. With Tian'anmen at the center, offices along 38-kilometer-long Chang'an Boulevard will concentrate on state, political and economic affairs. The areas around the Palace Museum (Imperial Palace or Forbidden City) and city gates as well as the lakes -- Zhongnanhai, Beihai and Housanhai -- have been designated landmark districts. And with a look to the future, an increasing number of historical, cultural and revolutionary sites are being renovated and opened to the public.

Beijing-Long-Standing Restaurants



Duyichu
The restaurant was a small hut when it was set up in 1738 (the 3rd year of Emperor Qianlong’s reign in the Qing Dynasty) by a man named Li from Shanxi Province. In the 7th year of Emperor Qianlong’s reign or 1742, a small building was built to sell boiled peanuts, sugared date, aired meat and so on.
In the 17th year of Emperor Qianlong’s reign, it became famous because of the name Duyichu and the Tiger Head Plaque granted by the emperor. During Emperor Tongzhi’s reign, the restaurant added in his menu Steamed Dumpling which had thin coat, rich stuffing and tasted delicious. During the war against Japanese, it survived from closing down and suffered poor business until its rebirth when Beijing was liberated. After the Joint Public-Private Ownership reform, the restaurant moved from the south of Xianyukou to the north of it into a large building with 200 square meters in business space. Nowadays it is capable to receive two or three thousand person times per day. The Tiger Head Plaque inscribed by Emperor Qianlong is hanging in the center of the hall reads Duyichu, and another plaque inscribed by Guo Moruo is hanging in the entrance.
Featured foods: Steamed Dumpling of Three Fresh Delicacies, Fried Triangle Rolls, Steamed Dumpling, Qianlong Cabbage, Fried Round Mass of Food


Quanjude
The renowned brand of Quanjude dates back to 1864 (the third year in the reign of Emperor Tongzhi of Qing Dynasty). Through constant development and innovation of more than one handred years, the Quanjude cuisine has been created, starring the Quanjude Peking Duck, and including the All Duck Banquet and over 400 well-known dishes. The Quanjude Peking Duck and its unique food culture are famous across the world as an important component of the Chinese food culture.

Ruibinlou
Ruibinlou, a restaurant offering Dalian Pie Stuffed with Meat which is a Beijing local snack, is located in Menkuang Hutong in Dashanlan, Qianmen. Set up in 1876 during Emperor Guangxu’s reign in the Qing Dynasty, it has a history of 130 years. Originally it was run by Xiao Chunxuan and his wife in Dong’an Market, and the restaurant was called Ruiminglou. It was closed down in the second generation. In 1934, two employees of it, Luo Huxiang and Hao Jiarui set up Xiangrui Restauran after their names Xiang and Rui in Menkuang Hutong and went on making Dalian Pie Stuffed with Meat. In 1986, the restaurant was rebuilt to a two-floored building and renamed Ruibinlou. In 1997, Dalian Pie Stuffed with Meat was inscribed as Famous Snack of China by China Cuisine Association, and in 1998, Ruibinlou was inscribed as Time-Honored Brand of China by the Domestic Trade Department.
Dalian Pie Stuffed with Meat is a Beijing local snack, it looks like Dalian–money bag hanging on the waist in the old times, hence the name. It is popular because it has thin coat and rich stuffing, and is delicious and instant combination of staple and non-staple foods giving people a fill feeling.


Nengrenju
It is well known for its seasoning. Guest coming here could know what “clean plate and clear soup” means. As the meat is out, the plate is clean without any blood left, and as the dinner finished, the soup is clear without any bubble. This is rare among all chafing dish restaurants nowadays.


Huguo Temple Snack Restaurant
Huguo Temple Snack Restaurant is one of the representatives of Beijing local snack. It is well known for rich variety, outstanding features and deep culture in it. Over 80 local snackswhich are popular among people from Beijing and all over the country as well as foreign guests,such as Stuffed Glutinous Rice Flour Ball, Glutinous Rice Flour Roll with Red Bean Paste and Soy Bean Flour, Pea Flour Cake, Fried Dough Twist, Fried Glutinous Rice Balls with Sesame, Fried Doughnut, Flour Tea, Gut Soup, Fermented Soya Milk, and more, could be found here.
In the spring of 1999, four chefs from Huguo Temple Snack Restaurant went to Singapore to attend the “Spring in River Bank–Greeting the New Year”. The delicate snacks made by them were highly praised by Singapore citizens and Premier Wu Zuodong, after the event, ordered 100 Glutinous Rice Flour Roll with Red Bean Paste and Soy Bean Flourfor the State Banquet. Local snacks have been present to elegant places. In November 2004, Business Department of Huguo Temple Snack Restaurant sent chefs to participate the 4th Macao Cate Festival and won great reputation in Macao with delicate Beijing local snacks and technique.
Huguo Temple Snack Restaurant as a time-honored brand in China, based on carrying out the local snack tradition, focuses on research and innovation, and introduced the Local Snacks Banquet integrating fine works of local snacks and Moslem flavor with excellent technique and deliberate banquet design

Beijing Prospect


Approaching the turn of the millennium, Beijing has mapped its blueprint for tomorrow: By 2010, Beijing will achieve an all-round development of economic and social development. The functions as political and cultural center will be further enhanced and brought to perfection. It will become the best city with the most developed culture, education, science and technology, social ethics and conventions and democracy and legal system. An economic system suited to the characteristics of the capital will be completed, led by a new and high technology industry, with developed tertiary industry, rational industrial Structure and high efficiency and high quality. The people's living standards will be raised to a higher level on the basis of a comfortable level. The city environment will be further improved and the city's management level will be improved markedly. By 2010, the GDP will be double that of 2000 and a fairly perfect socialist market system will take shape. The comprehensive strength of the economy, science and technology and social development will reach or surpass in some aspects the levels of capital cities of middle developed countries. By the mid-21st century, Beijing will become a modern international metropolis.With full confidence, Beijing is on its march into the new century.

Beijing CBD


With an area of 3.99 square kilometres (sq.km), Central Business District (CBD) Chaoyang is home to around 3,000 domestic and foreign companies. Like other world-famous districts such as Manhattan in New York City and Zhonghuan in Hong Kong, CBD provides an excellent investment environment, convenient transportation, and a high-speed telecommunications system. Office towers, hotels, first-class apartments and multiple service organizations involved in finance, IT and intermediary service industries make Chaoyang Beijing's biggest and most rapidly developing economic area. CBD has become a symbol of modern Beijing.

Olympic Park


Olympic Park in Chaoyang District will be the heart of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. It is on the northern end of Beijing's axis and covers 12.15 square kilometres (sq.km). To the north lies the Olympic Forest Park. To the south are: 14 stadiums, Olympic Village, Media Centre, International Radio and TV Centre, National Sports Museum, China International Exhibiton Centre and National Olympic Sports Centre.
After 2008, Olympic Park plans to become Beijing's biggest multi-function community with trade centres, business centres, exhibition halls, large-scale stadiums and entertainment facilities. It will be the one of Beijing's landmarks.

Mo Hill (Mo Shan) Travel



An important part of the famous Wuhan East Lake Scenic Area, Mo Hill, also called Millstone Hill, lies southeast of East Lake. The graceful east peak that looks like a millstone gave the hill its present name, Millstone Hill. Covering a total area of about 5 square kilometers, it boasts abundant plants and unique gardens, amid the culture of the State of Chu (one of the seven warring states before Qin (221BC - 206BC) in China's first feudal dynasty). Many charming scenes, such as Chutian Jimu (Looking at the State of Chu As Far As One Can See), Botanical-Viewing Garden, Tiantai Chenxi (Morning Rays of Heaven Platform), and Zhu De's Stele Pavilion, are located on the hill.
On the first peak of the Mo Hill stands the pavilion called Zhu De's Stele Pavilion. Two stories high, it is famous for a red stele lying in front on which is carved the epigraph of Zhu De (an important leader of the Chinese revolutionary period), and an attached horizontal board inscribed 'Zhu De's Stele Pavilion' by Guo Moruo (a famous Chinese author). The second floor of the pavilion affords an excellent view of the beautiful lake.
Fans of Chu culture will particularly enjoy the State of Chu culture theme park. Many historical places such as the City Wall of the State of Chu, the Chu Market, the Chu Talent Garden, the Chu Heaven Platform, etc., introduce the current State of Chu in this area.
At the entrance to the State of Chu's cultural sightseeing area is the City Wall at 23.4 meters (77 feet) tall and 11 meters (36 feet) wide. Chu people prefer the color red. The surrounding wall made of reddish-brown stones is magnificent in its primitive simplicity. The street of the Chu Market with special craftworks and distinctive local foods exemplifies Chu architectural styles. Not far from the Chu Market is the Chu Talent Garden, where over a hundred statues in the garden depict outstanding Chu litterateurs, scientists, myths characters and so on.
The Chu Heaven Platform affords clear views of Chu relics, great paintings, calligraphy, and waxworks of famous persons. Thirty-six meters (118 feet) tall and with an area of 2260 meters (7415 feet), it has 345 steps in front, culminating in the soul part of Mo Hill - the four-floor Chu Heaven Platform. Wearing classic Chu costumes, bandsmen play upbeat ancient music. Lifelike waxworks of eminent persons are displayed on the second floor, while Chu relics are exhibited on the third floor. A panoramic view of the entire East Lake Scenic Area is available from the summit.
The incredible Botanical Viewing Garden lies on the south side of Mo Hill. More than 360 kinds of plants are nursed in 13 special gardens, such as the Plum Garden, Cherry Blossom Garden, Rhododendron Garden, etc., for viewing and education. Among them the most famous is the Cherry Blossom Garden which covers an area of 150 mu (25 acres), valued as one of the world's three cherry blossom capitals, together with Hirosaki in Japan and Washington D.C. in America. The 2006 Wuhan Cherry Blossom Festival offers top grade cherry blossoms plus rich and colorful activities in the garden that attract visitors from all over the world. The Plum Garden, listed as the top of the four plum gardens in China, is also worth a visit. March, April, and May are the best viewing months.
Recreation facilities such as the slide way and ropeway, offer an exciting change of pace.
Put Mo Hill belongs on everyone's itinerary.

East Lake Scenic Area Travel


East Lake, the biggest scenery tourist attraction in Wuhan and also the largest lake within a city in China, is located on the south bank of the Yangtze River and in the east suburb of Wuchang. It covers an area of 87 square kilometers (33 square kilometers of water area) that is five times greater than the area of the West Lake in Hangzhou . Because of its winding banks and crisscrossing ponds and brooks, it is called 'a lake with 99 bays'. The East Lake Scenic Area was formed from many famous scenic spots along the bank. The six major ones are Tingtao (Listening to Surging Waves), Mo Hill (Millstone Hill), Luoyan (Diving Wild Goose), Baima (White Horse), Chuidi (Playing Flutes), and Luohong Hills.
Among the six scenic areas, Tingtao and Mo Hill scenic areas are the most two notable and are open to visitors.
The East Lake gate opens to the Tingtao scenic area featuring the rare sequoia especially elegant in late autumn. The Listening-to-the-Waves Tower (Tingtao Xuan), with its classic elegance is one of the famous buildings in this area, along with Land of Water and Cloud (Shuiyun Xiang) which serves as a teahouse, and the Tingtao Inn of Wine, a restaurant offering local fish dishes. On the north, the center of this area, is the Poetry-Reciting Pavilion (Xingyinge), built for memorizing works of Qu Yuan, the great patriotic poet of the State of Chu (one of the seven warring states before Qin (221BC-206BC) in China's first feudal dynasty). Many exhibits about Qu Yuan are featured in this building including his great literary masterpieces. In addition, the first allegory sculpture park in China is here displaying wonderful sculpture and allegories.
Characterized by beautiful landscape, abundant plants, the customs of the State of Chu and unique gardens, the Mo Hill Scenic Area attracts many tourists. In this area, the Chu cultural theme park displays the Chu culture in China. The Botanical Viewing Garden where more than 360 kinds of plants are nursed in 13 special gardens with flowers blooming all the year round - orchids and cherry blossoms in spring, lotus in summer, osmanthus in autumn, and plum blossoms in winter - is also admirable. Two of the most famous are the Cherry Blossom Garden said to be one of the world's three cherry blossom capitals along with Hirosaki in Japan and Washington in America, and the Plum Blossom Garden which is listed as the top plum garden. For more details about Mo Hill, please click Mo Hill.
Other scenic areas include Luoyan (Diving Wild Goose), known for its serene environment, Baima (White Horse), with the white horse tombs, Chuidi (Playing Flutes), Zhu Zhen (the sixth son of Zhu Yuanzhang, the first emperor of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)), and Luohong Hills, where the highly respected Wuhan University is situated.
Besides these, the Bird Forest with 200 kinds of birds, the mysterious East Lake Ocean Park, the biggest sand beach bathing area in inner China, the Friendship Forest where many other cities' delegates together with Wuhan people have planted trees symbolizing friendship are all worth a visit.
What make the East Lake Scenic Area more incredible are its recreational facilities: the exciting slide way, the ropeway, the yachts, tandem bikes, the skating rink and the pleasure ground for children.
As Wuhan has a subtropical monsoon climate with four distinct seasons, the ideal months to visit are from March to April and from September to October. Thus you avoid the scorching summer heat of July and August with 40 C (104 F) heat, and the cold winter period from November to late January with its severe cold. The festival periods such as the Wuhan International Tourist Festival (Late September-Mid October), Plum Blossom Festival (February-March) are the highly recommended times to visit the East Lake Scenic Area.