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Destination:
SHANGHAI, China
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Tale
of two cities
East meets West in Shanghai
Shanghai
delight: A day-and-night ferry system carries workers and
tourists between the Pudong New Development Zone and downtown
Shanghai. |
SHANGHAI
-- With growing fascination, I stood at my 19th- floor hotel window
and watched the traffic on the Huangpu River, which slices through
the heart of this burgeoning metropolis of 14.5 million people. The
waterway was alive with vessels of all sizes: Freighters, tugboats,
barges and cruise ships.
Also, just two blocks away,
vintage ferryboats were departing every 10 minutes to carry foot and
bicycle traffic across the Huangpu to a terminal situated near
riverfront buildings adorned with turn-of-the-century European-style
architecture. The latter is a landmark area called the Bund, once
known as the Wall Street of China.
I soon would be
catching one of those ferries to explore other Shanghai sights:
Nanjing Road, hailed as China's greatest shopping street; the
historic Peace Hotel; the city's new art museum; and the enticing
teahouses, shops and 400-year-old Yu Garden in Old Town.
But first, I had to join Robert Adelski for breakfast
downstairs in the 612-room Pudong Shangri-La hotel. I was looking
forward to meeting Adelski, an expatriate businessman from
California who has lived and worked in Shanghai for 10 years. He
wasted no time offering his personal insights about the city's
pluses.
"My wife and I love the secure feeling here.
If she wanted, she could walk home at 3 a.m. without fear of being
mugged or attacked. There are no guns on the streets, no drugs in
the schools and no graffiti on the buildings."
Pointing out the window, Adelski continued, "As
recently as 1990, there was nothing but farmland and rice paddies on
this side of the river. Now the government is building a huge new
development area that'll become the centre of finance and commerce
in China. The future is here; Hong Kong is yesterday."
He was describing the new 21st-century tourist,
economic and commercial centre being built in Pudong, or East
Shanghai. This sector is designed to become China's Manhattan.
The Shangri-La (1998) was the first international
hotel in the area. It has been followed by the Grand Hyatt Shanghai,
which occupies the top third of an 88-storey skyscraper.
Even taller is the nearby Oriental Pearl, highest TV
tower in Asia at 1,535 ft. and the symbol of Pudong's phenomenal
growth. It's a must-see because -- after rocketing upward in its
jet-powered elevators to a roomy observation deck -- you're treated
to a spectacular 360-degree overview of Shanghai.
Western tourists get a joyous greeting from
Chinese youth.
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Visitors also can
see the transformation taking place in Pudong, where the new toys
will include an international airport, industrial parks, convention
centre, shopping malls, tree-lined promenades, more hotels,
theatres, railway station, aquarium and a forest of high-rise office
towers. Linking Eastern Shanghai with the rest of the city are
bridges and an auto-only tunnel. New bridges, tunnels and a subway
line will follow.
Despite this progress, Adelski said,
"In China, you still need three things to succeed: Patience,
patience and patience."
After breakfast, I took my
first ferry ride across the Huangpu. The roundtrip fee is $1.20 Cdn.
A short walk along the Bund promenade took me to the
nostalgic Peace Hotel, Shanghai's grand monument to Art Deco. A
bellman said Noel Coward had worked on a play in one of its suites,
and Stephen Spielberg had filmed a scene there for Empire Of The
Sun. The hotel's 11th-floor roof garden, open to the public, is a
great spot for scanning and photographing various city sites.
Next stop: Busy Nanjing Road.
An
estimated one million pedestrians crowd each day onto this street of
department stores, shopping malls, designer and gift boutiques,
cinemas, restaurants, bookstores and nightclubs. The Western
influence is everywhere. That's especially true of the young Asian
women, who are resplendent in the latest Western fashions, from
short skirts and flashy earrings to high heels.
Even
the mannequins and most of the women's wear in the Number One
Department Store, a Russian-style emporium where the escalators only
go up, are Western. So are most of Shanghai's wedding parlours and
the glitzy government-owned Friendship Store.
For a
serious look at the city's cultural past, I visited Old Town, the
French Concession and Shanghai Museum.
My favourite
site has many names: Old Shanghai, Old Chinese Quarter and Old Town.
Whatever it's called, it offers a semblance of 19th-century Shanghai
with its winding alleys and old temples, pavilions, shops,
restaurants, teahouses and Yu Garden.
Built 400 years
ago, the classic Yu Garden is a beautiful monument to the past with
architectures of the Ming and Qing dynasties. Though small in
acreage, this retreat from Pudong's frenzied construction seems far
larger because its ingenious design leads visitors on serpentine
walkways that meander past a temple, pavilions, carp-filled lotus
ponds, artificial mountains, bubbling streams, rookeries, arching
trees and little bridges.
Opposite the garden's
entrance is the equally classic 19th-century Huxintang Teahouse,
floating like a lotus flower in a small pond. After crossing its
zigzag Bridge of Nine Turnings, I entered this five-sided, two-story
pavilion to sip a wonderful cup of Jasmine tea in China's
most-visited teahouse.
Some architectural traces of
the last century also remain in the French Concession, a
neighbourhood accessible via a vigorous walk from Old Town. Although
lots of new construction is under way in the French Quarter, the
surviving architecture includes Art Deco and Tudor townhouses,
neo-Gothic office blocks and a potpourri of mansions, villas,
churches and public buildings.
Worthy of a look-see in
Frenchtown, too, is Children's Palace, a centre where talented
youngsters pursue extracurricular activities. The palace offers
short-term training classes and after-school programs on music, art,
literature, science, technology and sports. I sat in on an enjoyable
music program where elementary school children sang songs in English
and Chinese.
Another way to experience China's
cultural treasures is by visiting its new mega-million dollar
oval-shaped art museum. Within its four stories are superb
collections of artifacts that span all the major dynasties,
paintings, calligraphy, jade and coins. Shanghai Museum (1996) is
the newest marvel of People's Square, the city's political and
cultural centre.
BOTTOM LINE: Foreign nationals need a current visa,
stamped in a valid passport, before visiting China. Contact
the Chinese Consulate
www.summer
holiday.info
www.winter holiday.us