Note: There is not much here about fish!
To see more fish, go directly to: Part
4b, A Visit to the Shanghai Ocean Aquarium
A Tour of China in Winter
Part 4a
The Space-Age City of Shanghai
By Howard Norfolk
Original to Aquarticles.com
Why do I call Shanghai a "space-age city?" Here's why! -

New Shanghai
Click on photos for enlargements, then
go 'BACK'
But let's come back to this later, and start with some older sights....
The Yuyuan Garden, in a corner of the old Chinese City,
was built by a Ming Dynasty merchant and finished in 1577. It is said to be the best
classic garden in China.

The Yu Gardens have recently been restored. There are lots of fish
in the pond.
Nearby Lao Je bazaar represents a fanciful version of an
old shopping centre.

Ornaments, artworks, antiques and tourist souvenirs are sold here.
The Jade Buddha Temple is Shanghai's leading Buddhist
site, but is not old - it was completed in 1918. Generally speaking, Chinese people do not
practise organised religion, since Mao discouraged this, and even demolished many places
of worship. (This temple was saved only because the monks plastered portraits of Mao on
the walls so the Red Guards couldn't tear them down without destroying Mao's face as
well!). Of my four guides, three candidly said that they had "no religion" (one
was a Buddhist). They had never been taught to believe in any of the gods. But on further
questioning I discovered that they did accept some superstitions; those relating to
feng shui, which essentially says that by taking certain actions one can influence
one's 'luck.' Feng shui is practised privately in one's own home and life, and does
not involve group worship, so it survived Mao's purges.

The practice of Buddhism is again allowed now, and this is the most
popular temple in Shanghai.

Jade Buddha and some attendants

One of the gold figurines was standing on this gold fish.

Chinese parking lots hold lots of vehicles in a small space! - But
as I have pointed out elsewhere, cycling keeps ordinary people fit and healthy.
On a 'free' day (when our private guide was off duty), my friend and I
wanted to visit the Shanghai Museum. We enquired about a private car and
driver for the day, as we had in Xi'an, but compared to Xi'an's US$24 for the day, in
Shanghai it would have cost US$48. We only really needed two $3 rides (we walked to some
other places) so we made do with taxis. Shanghai is considered a rich city in China, and
incomes and costs are higher than in other regions.
The Shanghai Museum was opened in 1996, in a rebuilt part of the old city.
It is said to be the best museum in China.

The Shanghai Museum is larger than it appears to be in this photo.
It sits in extensive grounds.

Traditional lions and dragons guard the entrance.

The lobby is impressive. Stairs and escalators go to the four floors
of galleries.

The artefacts are arranged in glass cases in a straightforward
manner, with none of the gimmicks that some provincial museums have.

I liked these figurines.

I wouldn't know a Ming vase from a Tang pot! - but there were lots
and lots of each. These two naturally caught my attention.

I also liked the galleries that displayed the culture of China's
'minority groups.'

There were also furniture and coin collections.
Shanghai is a booming city. The view from the courtyard of the museum,
although in the older part of the city, gives a glimpse of how it is developing.

Old Shanghai is being rebuilt.

The Chinese custom of kite flying still survives.
We walked through the city towards the river, and noticed the contrast
between the older buildings and the new skyscrapers that poke up amongst them.

The streets are crowded and narrow. This was not rush hour - during
rush hour, traffic comes to a standstill and bicycles are much faster than cars!
We came to The Bund - what was once the European part of
Shanghai. 'Bund' is an Anglo-Indian word meaning 'embankment on a muddy shore.'
Shanghai was always a port, but it really came into prominence after the
first Opium War in 1842, when British gunboats forced its surrender as one of five ports
open to foreign trade. Foreigners, particularly British, Americans, French and Germans
moved in and built impressive buildings along the waterfront and some residential
districts behind, which are still there. It became the 'whore of the Orient', where
fortunes were made and lost, and was the home of swindlers, gamblers, tycoons, dandies,
entertainers and missionaries. My guide ('Kevin') was amused when I told him of the
English verb (popular in the 19th Century) 'to shanghai,' which means 'to kidnap, usually
by drugging, for service aboard ship' or 'to induce another to do something through force
or underhanded methods.'

The Bund has an elegant European/American appearance. All the
buildings now fly Red Flags.
Kipling might have considered this to be one of the places where
"East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet." Chinese people
were excluded from European affluence, which is one reason why the Communist Party was
founded in Shanghai in 1921. It was occupied by the Japanese in WWII. In 1949 the city was
'liberated' from foreign influences, and organised crime, drugs, slavery, child labour and
other vices wiped out. Progress was made in industrialising the area, but the main
rebuilding has all taken place since the 1990s, when the Chinese government made a big
change in direction.
On the other side of the Huangpu River is the space-age skyline of Pudong!
This New Development Area has been developed as the financial centre of China,
with the stock exchange, banks, corporate headquarters, hotels and high-rise apartments.
It was boggy vegetable farming land until the 1990s, and it is hard to believe the
progress that has been made since then.

The tower in the middle is the Oriental Pearl Tower.

We took a boat trip down the middle of the river. To one side was
the Bund, and on the other, Pudong. ...Quite a contrast.

A new suspension bridge downstream.

Another angle on new Pudong.

...And a close up. The Shanghai Aquarium is the pyramid shaped
building behind the curved roof. More about this later!
We wanted to cross over into 'the future' and we found just the way to do
it - a tunnel under the river with individual fold-down four-seat rail cars (like skiing
gondolas on wheels). But a tunnel with a difference - as the car trundles through, there
is a fantastic light show with loud sound effects!

The tunnel is an amazing experience with its sound and light show.
I'm not sure whether any commuters use it, but if they do, they might regret it some
mornings!
The Pearl of the Orient TV Tower is 480m (1535 ft.)
high and was completed in 1994. It was built for TV transmission, but our guide told us
that Shanghai now uses cable, so it is now mainly just a tourist attraction.

We paid US $12 to go to the upper observation deck, and then another
$12 to go to the little round one near the very top.

Lots of army cadets were in the forecourt, posing for group
photographs.

Inside it was 'Happy New Year.'

New construction could be seen all over Shanghai.
The parts of China that I saw are developing at breakneck speed. There are
new highways, trains, airports, bridges, buildings, factories and public facilities going
up everywhere. The economy is expanding at a very much faster rate than those of the
developed world. I thought it must have been like this in Britain during the Industrial
Revolution 200 years or so ago.
China has a one-party system of government that is often criticised as
'non-democratic.' They have definitely made some big mistakes in the past with their
Communist experiments (although the Chinese still revere Mao, saying he was '70% right and
30% wrong'), but ideas have changed now, and as long as the leaders have the best
interests of the country in mind, they have the capability of getting things done fast. I
would compare China's leadership to that of a private company, where the 'boss' can make
decisions for the good of the company as a whole, without begging permission from
committeees or from every individual worker. In the democratic West we may take years to
decide whether a bridge or subway should be built, during which time politicians come and
go and policies change - whereas in China they would have half a dozen finished by then!
Our politicians tend to make popular decisions for the sake of their own short term
interests in getting re-elected, whereas China's one-party system allows for unpopular
projects that are expected to pay off in the long run. Could China's system be more
appropriate for a developing economy than our 'democratic' model that we are trying to
impose on the rest of the world? What will we think in twenty or thirty years' time when
China may well catch up and overtake us?

The Shanghai Ocean Aquarium from the Pearl Tower.
The Shanghai Ocean Aquarium has a prime position right at
the base of the Pearl Tower. It couldn't be any easier to find. We walked over to it....
Go to the next in this series:
China Tour Part 4b: A Visit to the
Shanghai Ocean Aquarium
The whole Tour of China in Winter series:
Part 1a: Introduction, and the Tourist Sights
of Beijing (Tourist sights)
Part 1b: A Visit to the Beijing Aquarium
(Public aquarium)
Part 1c: An Arcade of Aquarium Shops in
Beijing (Aquarium shops)
Part 1d: The Beijing Museum of
Natural History (Tourist sights)
Part 2a: Xi'an and the Army of
Terracotta Warriors (Tourist sights)
Part 2b: An Aquarium Market in Xi'an
(Aquarium shops)
Part 3a: The Spectacular Scenery of Guilin
(Tourist sights)
Part 3b: A Visit to the Guilin Ocean
Aquarium (Public aquarium)
Part 4a: The Space-Age City of Shanghai (Tourist sights)
Part 4b: A Visit to the Shanghai Ocean
Aquarium (Public aquarium)
Part 4c: Jiangyin Road, a Street of Aquarium
Shops in Shanghai (Aquarium shops)
Part 5: Fish Seen in Chinese
Restaurants (Native fish)
Part 6a: A Photographic Visit to Ocean Park,
Hong Kong (Public aquarium)
Part 6b: The Goldfish Pagoda at Ocean Park,
Hong Kong (Public aquarium)
See also (after a previous visit to Hong Kong):
Tung Choi. The Amazing Aquarium Store Street in Hong
Kong (Aquarium shops)
Or, back to:
Travel Index
|