Search Results for '2007/02/14/day-13-beihai-park'

Travel

Over the past few years I’ve been lucky enough to travel around quite a number of places in East Asia and a few other places besides. Along the way I’ve recorded my adventures in both pictures and words including a few travel tips so for what it’s worth I decided to index them here in case it’s of any help to anyone else -

Travelling Light
Combating Jet Lag
Avoiding Internet Censors

China

Beijing

Forbidden City
Temple of Heaven
Yiheyuan (Summer Palace)
Badaling Great Wall
Mutianyu Great Wall
Ming Tombs
Beihai Park
Yonghegong (Lama Temple)
White Cloud Temple (Bai Yun Guan)
Fragrant Hills (Xiangshan Park)
Yuyuantan Park
Confucian Temple
Bejing’s Underground City
Beijing Ancient Observatory
Art 798 District
Xiabu Xiabu (Hot Pot)

Geospatial Beijing (Map of main sites)

Shenzhen

City Hall & Library
Shun Hing Square Skyline
Wutong Shan Mountain
Hotter Than Hell

Yangshuo

Misty Mountains
Silver Cave
Lijiang River

Hong Kong

Hong Kong Moments
Sheung Wan
Victoria Peak

Other Cities

Wuhan
Qingdao
Nanjing
Shaoguan

South Korea

Seoul

Seoul
DMZ (Demilitarized Zone)
Gyeongbokgung Palace
Jongmyo Shrine & Changgyeonggung Palace
Cheonggyecheon Stream
Korean Folk Village
Dongdaemun
Namdaemun
Lotte World
Han River & 63 City
Jjimjilbang (Sauna)
Korea Train eXpress (KTX)

Busan

Evening in Busan
Beomeosa Temple
Kwanganri Beach
Jagalchi Market
Chungnyeol Shrine

Chuncheon

Chuncheon & Soyang Dam
Cheongpyeongsa Temple
Nami Island

Gyeongju

Gyeongju
Sa Rang Chae
Bulguksa Temple
Korean Cuisine

Europe

Rome
Venice
Paris
Amsterdam

United Kingdom

York
Edinburgh

United States

New York
Washington DC
Boston

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Local Colour

One of Beijing’s lesser know historical attractions are it’s Hutongs surrounding the Forbidden City which I visited when lost on my way to Beihai Park. These fascinating ancient residential areas are made up of narrow alleyways with traditional buildings arranged in closely packed quadrangles. As if looking through a window on to a lost world you get the feeling of stepping back in time here (even the locals look authentically old!), but still within sight of the icons of modernity which dominate Beijing’s skyline. Unfortunately some Hutongs were destroyed during the Cultural Revolution but luckily many are now designated protected areas. Still, as seems to be the general case in China: out with the old, in with the new…

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