Shanghai ( ) is the largest
city in China
, and one of the largest metropolitan
areas in the world, with over 20 million people.
Located on
China's central eastern coast at the mouth of the Yangtze River
, the city is administered as a municipality of the People's
Republic of China
with province-level
status.
Originally a fishing and textiles town, Shanghai grew to importance
in the 19th century due to its favorable
port
location and as one of the cities opened to foreign trade by the
1842
Treaty of Nanking. The city
flourished as a center of commerce between
east and
west, and
became a multinational hub of finance and business by the 1930s.
However, Shanghai's prosperity was interrupted after the 1949
Communist takeover and the
subsequent cessation of foreign investment.
Economic
reforms in 1990 resulted in intense development and financing
in Shanghai, and in 2005 Shanghai became the world's largest cargo
port.
The city
is a tourist destination renowned for its
historical landmarks such as the Bund
and City God Temple, its modern and
ever-expanding Pudong
skyline
including the Oriental Pearl Tower
, and its new reputation as a cosmopolitan center of culture and
design.Today, Shanghai is the largest center of commerce and
finance in
mainland China, and has
been described as the "showpiece" of the world's
fastest-growing major
economy.
Etymology

The two
Chinese characters in the name "Shanghai",
( , shàng; and , hǎi) literally mean "up, on, or above" and "sea"
The earliest occurrence of this name dates from the
Song Dynasty (11th century), at which time
there was already a river confluence and a town with this name in
the area. There are disputes as to how the name should be
interpreted, but official local histories have consistently said
that it means "the upper reaches of the sea". Due to the changing
coastline, Chinese historians have concluded that in the Tang
Dynasty Shanghai was literally on the sea, hence the origin of the
name. However, another reading, especially in
Mandarin, also suggests the sense of "go
onto the sea," which is consistent with the seaport status of the
city. A more poetic name for Shanghai switches the order of the two
characters,
Hǎishàng ( ), and is often used for terms
related to Shanghainese art and culture.
Shanghai is commonly abbreviated in Chinese as
Hù ( ). The
single character Hu ( ) appears on all motor vehicle license plates
issued in Shanghai today. This is derived from
Hu Du ( ),
the name of an ancient fishing village that once stood at the
confluence of
Suzhou Creek and the
Huangpu River back in the Tang Dynasty. The character Hu is often
combined with that for Song, as in Wusong Kou, Wu Song River, and
Songjiang to form the nickname
Song Hu. For
example, the Japanese attack on Shanghai in August 1937 is commonly
called the Song Hu Battle. Another early name for Shanghai was Hua
Ting, now the name of a four star hotel in the city. One other
commonly used nickname
Shēn ( ) is derived from the name
of
Chunshen Jun ( ), a nobleman and locally-revered hero
of the
Chu Kingdom in the 3rd century BC
whose territory included the Shanghai area. Sports teams and
newspapers in Shanghai often use the character
Shēn ( ) in
their names. Shanghai is also commonly called
Shēnchéng (
, "City of Shēn"). The city has also had various nicknames in
English, including "Paris of the East".
History
During the Song Dynasty (AD 960–1279) Shanghai was upgraded in
status from a village (cun) to a market town (zhen) in 1074, and in
1172 a second sea wall was built to stabilize the ocean coastline,
supplementing an earlier dike. From the Yuan Dynasty in 1292 until
Shanghai officially became a city for the first time in 1297, the
area was designated merely as a county (xian) administered by the
Songjiang (松江) Prefecture (Songjiang Fu).
Two important events helped promote Shanghai's development in the
Ming Dynasty. A
city wall was built for
the first time during in 1554, in order to protect the town from
raids by
Wokou (Japanese pirates). It measured
10 meters high and 5 kilometers in circumference. During the Wanli
reign (1573-1620), Shanghai received an important psychological
boost from the erection of a
City God
Temple (Cheng Huang Miao) in 1602. This honor was usually
reserved for places with the status of a city, such as a
prefectural capital (fu), and was not normally given to a mere
county town (zhen) like Shanghai. The honor was probably a
reflection of the town's economic importance, as opposed to its low
political status.
During the
Qing
Dynasty
, Shanghai became the most important sea port in the
whole Yangtze Delta region. This was a result of two
important central government policy changes. First of all, Emperor
Kangxi (1662-1723) in 1684 reversed the previous Ming Dynasty
prohibition on ocean going vessels, a ban that had been in force
since 1525. Secondly, Emperor Yongzheng in 1732 moved the customs
office (hai guan) for Jiangsu province from the prefectural capital
of Songjiang city to Shanghai, and gave Shanghai exclusive control
over customs collections for the foreign trade of all Jiangsu
province. As a result of these two critical decisions, Professor
Linda Cooke Johnson has concluded that by 1735 Shanghai had become
the major trade port for all of the lower Yangzi River region,
despite still being at the lowest administrative level in the
political hierarchy.

A view of the Bund in 1928

Nanjing Road in the 1930s
The
importance of Shanghai grew radically in the 19th century, as the
city's strategic position at the mouth of the Yangtze River
made it an ideal location for trade with the
West. During the
First Opium
War in the early 19th century, British forces temporarily held
Shanghai. The war ended with the 1842
Treaty of Nanjing, which saw the
treaty ports, Shanghai included, opened for
international trade. The
Treaty of
the Bogue signed in 1843, and the
Sino-American Treaty of Wangsia signed in
1844 together saw foreign nations achieve extraterritoriality on
Chinese soil, the start of the foreign concessions.
1854 saw the first meeting of the
Shanghai Municipal Council,
created in order to manage the foreign settlements. In 1860-1862,
civil war had been two times invaded
Shanghai(
Battle of
Shanghai ). In 1863, the British settlement, located to the
south of Suzhou creek (Huangpu district), and the American
settlement, to the north of Suzhou creek (Hongkou district), joined
in order to form the International Settlement. The French opted out
of the Shanghai Municipal Council, and maintained its own
French Concession, located to the
south of the International Settlement, which still exists today as
a popular attraction. Citizens of many countries and all continents
came to Shanghai to live and work during the ensuing decades; those
who stayed for long periods — some for generations — called
themselves "
Shanghailanders". In the
1920s and 1930s, almost 20,000 so-called
White Russians and Russian Jews fled the
newly-established Soviet Union and took up residence in Shanghai.
These
Shanghai Russians
constituted the second-largest foreign community. By 1932, Shanghai
had become the world's fifth largest city, home to 70,000
foreigners.

Shanghai has seen massive development
over the past 15 years
The
Sino-Japanese
War concluded with the Treaty
of Shimonoseki, which saw Japan
emerge as an
additional foreign power in Shanghai. Japan built the first
factories in Shanghai, which were soon copied by other foreign
powers to effect the emergence of Shanghai industry. Shanghai was
then the most important financial center in the
Far East.
Under the
Republic of
China
(1911-1949), Shanghai's political status was
finally raised to that of a municipality on July 14, 1927.
Although the territory of the foreign concessions was excluded from
their control, this new Chinese municipality still covered an area
of 828.8 square kilometers, including the modern-day districts of
Baoshan, Yangpu, Zhabei, Nanshi, and Pudong. Headed by a Chinese
mayor and municipal council, the new city governments first task
was to create a new city center in Jiangwan town of Yangpu
district, outside the boundaries of the foreign concessions. This
new city center was planned to include a public museum, library,
sports stadium, and city hall.
The
Imperial Japanese
Navy Air Service bombed Shanghai on 28 January 1932, nominally
in an effort to crush down Chinese student protests of the
Manchurian Incident and the subsequent
Japanese occupation of northeast China. The Chinese fought back in
what was known as the
January 28
Incident. The two sides fought to a standstill and a ceasefire
was brokered in May. The
Battle of
Shanghai in 1937 resulted in the occupation of the Chinese
administered parts of Shanghai outside of the International
Settlement and the French Concession. The International Settlement
was occupied by the Japanese on 8 December 1941 and remained
occupied until Japan's surrender in 1945. According to historian
Zhiliang Su, at least 149 "comfort houses" for
sexual slaves were established in Shanghai
during the occupation.
On 27 May
1949, the Communist Party of
China controlled the People's Liberation Army and took
control of Shanghai, which was one of only three former Republic of
China
(ROC) municipalities not merged into neighbouring
provinces over the next decade (the others being Beijing and Tianjin
).
Shanghai underwent a series of changes in the boundaries of its
subdivisions, especially in the next decade.
After 1949, most
foreign firms moved their offices from Shanghai to Hong Kong
, as part of an exodus of foreign investment due to
the Communist victory.
During the 1950s and 1960s, Shanghai became an industrial center
and center for revolutionary
leftism. Yet, even during the most
tumultuous times of the
Cultural
Revolution, Shanghai was able to maintain high economic
productivity and relative social stability.
In most of the
history of the People's Republic of China
, Shanghai has been the largest contributor of tax
revenue to the central government compared with other Chinese
provinces and municipalities. This came at the cost of
severely crippling Shanghai's infrastructure and capital
development.
Its importance to China's fiscal well-being
also denied it economic liberalizations that were started in the
far southern provinces such as Guangdong
during the mid-1980s. At that time,
Guangdong province paid nearly no taxes to the central government,
and thus was perceived as fiscally expendable for experimental
economic reforms.
Shanghai was finally permitted to initiate
economic reforms in 1991, starting the huge development still seen
today and the birth of Lujiazui
in Pudong
.
Geography and climate
Shanghai
sits on the Yangtze River Delta
on China
's eastern coast, and is roughly equidistant from
Beijing and Hong Kong
. The municipality as a whole consists of a
peninsula between the Yangtze
and Hangzhou Bay,
China's third largest island Chongming
, and a number of smaller islands.
It is
bordered on the north and west by Jiangsu Province
, on the south by Zhejiang Province
, and on the east by the East China Sea
. The city proper is bisected by the Huangpu River
, a tributary of the Yangtze
.
The
historic center of the city, the Puxi area, is
located on the western side of the Huangpu, while a new financial
district, Pudong
, has
developed on the eastern bank.
The vast majority of Shanghai's land area is flat, apart from a few
hills in the southwest corner, with an average elevation of . The
city's location on the flat
alluvial
plain has meant that new
skyscrapers
must be built with deep concrete piles to stop them sinking into
the soft ground.
The highest point is at the peak of Dajinshan
Island
at . The city has many rivers, canals, streams
and lakes and is known for its rich water resources as part of the
Taihu
drainage
area.
Public awareness of the
environment
is growing, and the city is investing in a number of environmental
protection projects. A 10-year,
US$1 billion cleanup of
Suzhou Creek, which runs through the city
center, is expected to be finished in 2008, and the government also
provides incentives for transportation companies to invest in
LPG buses
and
taxi.
Air
pollution in Shanghai is low compared to other Chinese cities
such as Beijing, but the rapid development
over the past decades means it is still high on worldwide
standards, comparable to Los Angeles
.
Shanghai has a
humid
subtropical climate (
Koppen climate classification
Cfa) and experiences four distinct seasons. In winter,
cold northerly winds from Siberia can cause nighttime temperatures
to drop below freezing, and although not usually associated with
snow, the city can receive one or two days of
snowfall per year. In contrast, and in spite of being the peak
tourist season, summer in Shanghai is very warm and humid, with
occasional downpours or freak
thunderstorms. The city is also susceptible to
typhoons, none of which in recent years has
caused considerable damage. The most pleasant seasons are Spring,
although changeable, and Autumn, which is generally sunny and dry.
Shanghai experiences on average 1,778 hours of sunshine per year,
with the hottest temperature ever recorded at , and the lowest at .
The average number of rainy days is 112 per year, with the wettest
month being June. The average frost-free period is 276 days.
Politics

Shanghai municipal government
building
Shanghai has been a
political hub of China
since the 20th century. The 1st
National
Congress of the Communist Party of China was held in Shanghai.
In addition, many of China's top government officials in
Beijing are known to have risen in Shanghai in the
1980s on a platform that was critical of the extreme leftism of the
Cultural Revolution, giving them
the tag "
Shanghai Clique" during the
1990s. Many observers of Chinese politics view the more
right-leaning Shanghai Clique as an opposing and competing faction
of the current Chinese administration under President
Hu Jintao and Premier
Wen
Jiabao. Shanghai's top jobs, the Party Chief and the position
of Mayor, have always been prominent on a national scale. Four
secretaries of municipal Party committee or mayors from Shanghai
eventually went on to take prominent Central Government positions,
including former President
Jiang Zemin,
former Premier
Zhu Rongji, and current
Vice-President
Xi Jinping. The top
administrative jobs are always appointed directly by the Central
Government.
The current Shanghai government under Mayor
Han Zheng has openly advocated transparency in the
city's government. However, in previous years a complicated system
of relationships between Shanghai's government, banks, and other
civil institutions has been under scrutiny for corruption,
motivated by faction politics in Beijing; these allegations from
Beijing did not go anywhere until late 2006. Since Jiang's
departure from office there has been a significant amount of clash
between the local government in Shanghai and the
Central People's Government, an
evolving example of
de facto Chinese federalism. The Shanghai
government looks after almost all of the city's economic interests
without interference from Beijing.
By 2006, Shanghai's actual level of autonomy has arguably surpassed
that of any
autonomous regions,
raising alarm bells in Beijing. In September 2006, the Shanghai
Communist Party Secretary
Chen Liangyu,
Shanghainese in origin and often clashing with central government
officials, along with a number of his followers, were removed from
their positions after a probe into the city's pension fund. Over a
hundred investigators, sent by the Central Government, reportedly
uncovered clues of money diversion from the city's pension fund to
unapproved loans and investments. Chen's abrupt removal is viewed
by many Chinese as a political manoeuvre by President
Hu Jintao to further secure his power in the
country, and retain administrative centralism. In March 2007 the
central government appointed
Xi Jinping,
who is not a Shanghai native, to become the Party Secretary, the
most powerful office in the city. Xi would eventually be
transferred to work for the central government in Beijing and was
replaced by
Yu Zhengsheng in November
2007.
Administrative divisions
Shanghai is administratively equal to a
province and is divided into 18
county-level
divisions: 17
district and one
county. There is no single downtown
district in Shanghai, the urban core is scattered across several
districts.
Prominent central business areas include
Lujiazui
on the east bank of the Huangpu River
, and The
Bund
and Hongqiao areas in the
west bank of the Huangpu River. The city hall and major
administration units are located in
Huangpu District, which also serve as a
commercial area, including the famous
Nanjing Road.
Other major
commercial areas include Xintiandi
and the classy Huaihai Road (or Avenue
Joffre before Liberation) in Luwan
district and
Xujiahui
(which used to be translated into English as
Zikawei, reflecting the Shanghainese pronunciation) in
Xuhui
District
.
Many
universities in
Shanghai are located in residential areas of Yangpu
District
and Putuo District.
Nine of
the districts govern Puxi (literally
Huangpu
River
west), or the older part of urban Shanghai on
the west bank of the Huangpu River
. These nine districts are collectively
referred to as Shanghai Proper (上海市区) or the core city (市中心):
Pudong
(literally
Huangpu
River
east), or the newer part of urban and suburban
Shanghai on the east bank of the Huangpu River
, is governed by:
- Pudong
New District
(浦东新区 Pǔdōng Xīn Qū) — Chuansha County until 1992
Seven of the districts govern suburbs, satellite towns, and rural
areas further away from the urban core:
Chongming Island, an island at the mouth of the
Yangtze
, is governed
by:
As of 2003, these county-level divisions are further divided into
the following 220
township-level
divisions: 114
town, 3
township, 103
subdistricts. Those are in turn divided into the
following
village-level
divisions: 3,393
neighborhood
committees and 2,037
village
committees.
Economy
Shanghai is often regarded as the center of finance and trade in
mainland China. Modern development began with the economic reforms
in 1992, a decade later than many of the Southern Chinese
provinces, but since then Shanghai quickly overtook those provinces
and maintained its role as the business center in mainland China.
Shanghai also hosts the largest share market in mainland
China.
Shanghai has one of the world's busiest ports. The non-state sector
has grown to generate 42% of Shanghai's GSP, while the reformed
state-sector generates 57.5% of GDP. Since 2005, Shanghai has
ranked first of the world's busiest cargo ports throughout,
handling a total of 560 million tons of cargo in 2007.
Shanghai container
traffic has surpassed Hong
Kong
to become the second busiest port in the world,
behind Singapore
.Shanghai and Hong Kong
are rivaling to be the economic center of the
Greater China
region. Hong Kong has the advantage of a
stronger legal system, international market integration, superior
economic freedom, greater banking
and service expertise, lower taxes, and a fully-convertible
currency. Shanghai has stronger links to both the Chinese interior
and the central government, and a stronger base in manufacturing
and technology.
Shanghai has increased its role in finance, banking, and as a major
destination for corporate headquarters, fueling demand for a highly
educated and modernized workforce. Shanghai has recorded a
double-digit growth for 15 consecutive years since 1992. In 2008,
Shanghai's nominal GDP posted a 9.7% growth to 1.37 trillion yuan.
The
Shanghai Stock Exchange
is the world's fastest growing, with the
Shanghai Composite Index growing
130% in 2006.
As in many other areas in China, Shanghai is undergoing a building
boom. In Shanghai the modern architecture is notable for its unique
style, especially in the highest floors, with several top floor
restaurants which resemble flying saucers.
For a gallery of
these unique architecture designs, see Shanghai .

Shanghai by night
The bulk of Shanghai buildings being constructed today are
high-rise apartments of various height, color and design.
There is
now a strong focus by city planners to develop more "green areas"
(public parks) among the apartment complexes in order to improve
the quality of life for Shanghai's residents, quite in accordance
to the "Better City - Better Life" theme of Shanghai's Expo 2010
.
Industrial zones in Shanghai include Shanghai Hongqiao Economic and
Technological Development Zone, Jinqiao Export Economic Processing
Zone, Minhang Economic and Technological Development Zone, and
Shanghai Caohejing High and New Technological Development Zone (see
List of economic and technological development zones in
Shanghai).
Demographics
The 2000 census put the population of Shanghai Municipality at
16.738 million, including the migrant population, which made up
3.871 million. Since the 1990 census the total population had
increased by 3.396 million, or 25.5%. Males accounted for 51.4%,
females for 48.6% of the population. 12.2% were in the age group of
0–14, 76.3% between 15 and 64 and 11.5% were older than 65.
As of
2008, the population of long-term residents reached 18.88 million,
including an officially registered permanent population of 13.71
million, and 4.79 million of registered long-term migrants from
other provinces, many from Anhui
, Jiangsu
, and Zhejiang
Provinces. According to the Shanghai
Municipal Statistics Bureau, there were 133,340 foreigners in
Shanghai in 2007.
In addition, there are a large number of
people from Taiwan
for
business (estimates vary from 350,000 to 700,000). By 2009,
the Shanghai South Korean communities increased to more than
70,000. The average life expectancy in 2006 was 80.97 years, 78.67
for men and 82.29 for women.
Languages
Most
Shanghainese residents are descendants of immigrants from the two
adjacent provinces of Jiangsu
and Zhejiang
who moved to Shanghai in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth century, regions that generally also speak Wu Chinese. In the past decades, many
migrants from other areas of China have come to Shanghai for work.
They often cannot speak the local dialect and therefore use
Mandarin as a
lingua franca.
The
vernacular language is
Shanghainese, a dialect of
Wu Chinese, while the official language is
Standard Mandarin. The local
dialect is mutually unintelligible with Mandarin, and is an
inseparable part of the Shanghainese identity.
The modern Shanghainese dialect is based on the Suzhou
dialect of
Wu, the prestige dialect of Wu
spoken within the Chinese city of Shanghai prior to the modern
expansion of the city, the Ningbo dialect of Wu, and the dialect of
Shanghai's surrounding rural areas now within the Hongkou, Baoshan
and Pudong districts, which is simply called "Bendihua", or "the
local dialect". It is influenced to a lesser extent by the
dialects of other nearby regions from which large numbers of people
have have migrated to Shanghai since the 20th century. Nearly all
Shanghainese under the age of 40 can speak Mandarin fluently.
Fluency in foreign languages is unevenly distributed. Most senior
residents who received a
university
education before the revolution, and those who worked in foreign
enterprises, can speak English. Those under the age of 26 have had
contact with English since primary school, as English is taught as
a mandatory course starting from the fourth grade.
Religion
Due to its cosmopolitan history, Shanghai has a rich blend of
religious heritage as shown by the religious buildings and
institutions still scattered around the city.
Taoism has a presence in Shanghai in the form of
several temples, including the
City God
Temple, at the heart of the old city, and a temple dedicated to
the
Three Kingdoms general
Guan Yu. The
Wenmiao is a temple dedicated to
Confucius.
Buddhism has
had a presence in Shanghai since ancient times.
Longhua
temple
, the largest temple in Shanghai, and Jing'an Temple, were first founded in the
Three Kingdoms period.
Another
important temple is the Jade Buddha Temple
, which is named after a large statue of Buddha carved out of jade
in the temple. In recent decades, dozens of modern temples
have been built throughout the city.
Shanghai is also an important center of
Christianity in China. Churches belonging to
various denominations are found throughout Shanghai and maintain
significant congregations. Shanghai has the highest Catholic
percentage in Mainland China (2003).
Among Catholic churches, St Ignatius
Cathedral
in Xujiahui
is one of the largest, while She Shan
Basilica
is the only active pilgrimage site in China.
Shanghai has the highest Catholic percentage in Mainland China
(2003). The city is also home to
Muslim,
Jewish, and
Eastern
Orthodox communities.A predominant religion in Shanghai is
Mahayana Buddhism, and
Taoism is also followed by many Shanghai
residents.
Education
While
Beijing and Hong Kong
are considered the educational centers of China,
Shanghai is also home to some of the country's
most prestigious universities, including Fudan University, Shanghai
Jiao Tong University
and Tongji
University.
Transport
Shanghai has an extensive public transport system, largely based on
buses, trolleybuses, taxis, and a rapidly expanding metro system.
All of these public transport tools can be accessed using the
Shanghai Public
Transportation Card, which uses radio frequencies so the card
does not have to physically touch the scanner.
The
Shanghai Metro rapid-transit system
and elevated light rail has eight lines (lines 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8
and 9) at present and extends to every core urban district as well
as neighbouring suburban districts such as Songjiang and Minhang
. According to the development schedule of
the municipal government, by the year 2010, another 4 lines
(numbers 7, 10, 11 and 13) will be built, while extensions are also
underway for lines 2, 6, 8, 9. It is one of the fastest-growing
metro systems in the world—the first line opened in 1995, and , the
Shanghai Metro is the
11th busiest system
worldwide. Shanghai also has the world's most extensive
bus system with nearly one thousand bus lines, operated
by numerous transportation companies. Not all of Shanghai's bus
routes are numbered—some have names exclusively in Chinese. Bus
fares are usually ¥1, ¥1.5 or ¥2, sometimes higher, while Metro
fares run from ¥3 to ¥9 depending on distance.
Taxis in Shanghai are plentiful and government
regulation has set taxi fares at an affordable rate for the average
resident—¥12 for 3 km, ¥16 after 23:00, and 2.4RMB/km
thereafter. Before the 1990s, bicycling was the most ubiquitous
form of transport in Shanghai, but the city has since banned
bicycles on many of the city's main roads to ease congestion.
However, many streets have bicycle lanes and intersections are
monitored by "Traffic Assistants" who help provide for safe
crossing. Further, the city government has pledged to add
180 km of cycling lanes over the next few years. It is worth
noting that a number of the main shopping and tourist streets,
Nanjing Road and
Huaihai Road do not allow bicycles.
With rising disposable incomes, private car ownership in Shanghai
has also been rapidly increasing in recent years. The number of
cars is limited, however, by the number of available number plates
available at
public auction. Since
1998 the number of new car registrations is limited to 50,000
vehicles a year.
In cooperation with the Shanghai municipality and the Shanghai
Maglev Transportation Development Co.
(SMT),
German Transrapid constructed the
first
commercial Maglev railway in the world
in 2002, from Shanghai's Longyang Road subway
station in Pudong to Pudong
International Airport
. Commercial operation started in 2003. The
30 km trip takes 7 minutes and 21 seconds and reaches a
maximum speed of 431 km/h (267.8 mph). Normal operating
speeds usually reach 431 km/h, but during a test run, the
Maglev has been shown to reach a top speed of 501 km/h.
Two
railway
intersect in Shanghai: Jinghu Railway
(Beijing–Shanghai) Railway passing through Nanjing
, and Huhang Railway
(Shanghai–Hangzhou). Shanghai is served by two main railway
stations,
Shanghai Railway
Station and
Shanghai
South Railway Station. Express service to Beijing through
Z-series trains is fairly convenient.
A maglev
train route to Hangzhou
(Shanghai-Hangzhou Maglev
Train) might begin construction in 2010. A
high-speed railroad to
Beijing is also in the works.
More than six national
expressways (prefixed with "G") from
Beijing and from the region around Shanghai
connect to the city. Shanghai itself has six toll-free elevated
expressways (
skyways) in the urban core and 18 municipal
expressways (
prefixed with "A").
There are ambitious
plans to build expressways connecting Shanghai's Chongming
Island
with the urban core. For a city of
Shanghai's size, road traffic is still fairly smooth and convenient
but getting more congested as the number of cars increases
rapidly.
Shanghai
has two commercial airports: Hongqiao
International
and Pudong
International
, the latter of which has the third highest traffic
in China, following Beijing
Capital International Airport
and Hong Kong International
Airport
. Pudong International handles more
international traffic than Beijing Capital however, with over 17.15
million international passengers handled in 2006 compared to the
latter's 12.6 million passengers.
Hongqiao mainly serves domestic routes,
with a few city-to-city flights to Tokyo's Haneda
Airport
and Seoul's city airport. Hongqiao airport
is about 10 kilometers west of the downtown. One of the airport's
advantages is it is much closer to the city center than Pudong
airport.
Architecture
Shanghai has a rich collection of buildings and structures of
various
architectural styles.
The
Bund
, located by
the bank of the Huangpu
River
, contains a rich collection of early 20th century
architecture, ranging in style from neoclassical HSBC
Building
to the art deco Sassoon House. A number of areas in the
former foreign concessions are also well preserved, most notably
the
French Concession.
Despite
rampant redevelopment, the old city still retains some buildings of
a traditional style, such as the Yuyuan Garden
, an elaborate traditional garden in the Jiangnan style.
In recent years, a large number of architecturally distinctive,
even eccentric, skyscrapers have sprung up throughout Shanghai.
Notable
examples of contemporary architecture include the Shanghai
Museum
, Shanghai Grand Theatre
in the People's Square
precinct and Shanghai Oriental Arts
Center.
One uniquely Shanghainese cultural element is the
shikumen (石库门) residences, which are two or
three-story
townhouses, with the front
yard protected by a high brick wall. Each residence is connected
and arranged in straight alleys, known as a
lòngtang (弄堂),
pronounced
longdang in Shanghainese. The entrance to each
alley is usually surmounted by a stylistic stone arch. The whole
resembles
terrace houses or
townhouses commonly seen in Anglo-American
countries, but distinguished by the tall, heavy brick wall in front
of each house. The name "shikumen" literally means "stone storage
door", referring to the strong gateway to each house.
The shikumen is a cultural blend of elements found in Western
architecture with traditional
Lower Yangtze
(Jiangnan) Chinese architecture and social behavior. All
traditional Chinese dwellings had a courtyard, and the shikumen was
no exception. Yet, to compromise with its urban nature, it was much
smaller and provided an "interior haven" to the commotions in the
streets, allowing for raindrops to fall and vegetation to grow
freely within a residence. The courtyard also allowed sunlight and
adequate ventilation into the rooms.

The Shanghai International Exhibition
Center, an example of Soviet neoclassical architecture in
Shanghai.
The city
also has some beautiful examples of Soviet
neoclassical architecture.
These
buildings were mostly erected during the period from the founding
of the People's
Republic
in 1949 until the Sino-Soviet Split in the late
1960s. During this decade, large numbers of Soviet experts
poured into China to aid the country in the construction of a
communist state, some of them were
architects. Examples of Soviet neoclassical architecture in
Shanghai include what is today the Shanghai International
Exhibition Center.
Beijing, the nation's
capital, displays an even greater array of this particular type of
architecture.

Skyscrapers in Pudong
The
Pudong
district of Shanghai displays a wide range of
supertall skyscrapers.
The most
prominent examples include the Jin Mao Tower
and the taller Shanghai
World Financial Center
, which at 492 metres tall is the tallest skyscraper
in mainland China and ranks
second in the world. The distinctive Oriental Pearl
Tower
, at 468 metres, is located nearby toward downtown
Shanghai. Its lower sphere is now available for living
quarters, at very high prices.
Another tall highrise in the Pudong area of
Shanghai is the newly finished Development Tower
. It stands at 269 meters.
Also in
Pudong, a third supertall skyscraper topping the other Shanghai
buildings called the Shanghai Tower
is under construction. With a height of 632
metres (2074 feet), the building will have 127 floors upon
planned completion in 2014.
Culture
Because of Shanghai's status as the cultural and economic center of
East Asia for the first half of the
twentieth century, it is popularly seen as the birthplace of
everything considered modern in China. It was in Shanghai, for
example, that the first motor car was driven and the first train
tracks and modern sewers were laid. It was also the intellectual
battleground between socialist writers who concentrated on
critical realism, which was pioneered by
Lu Xun,
Mao
Dun,
Nien Cheng and famous French
novel the
Man's Fate, and the
more "
bourgeois", more romantic and
aesthetically inclined writers, such as
Shi
Zhecun,
Shao Xunmei (
邵洵美),
Ye Lingfeng (葉靈鳳) and
Eileen Chang.
Besides literature, Shanghai was also the birthplace of
Chinese cinema and theater. China’s first
short film,
The Difficult Couple (難夫難妻, Nanfu Nanqi,
1913), and the country’s first fictional feature film,
An
Orphan Rescues His Grandfather (孤兒救祖記, Gu'er jiu zuji, 1923)
were both produced in Shanghai. These two films were very
influential, and established Shanghai as the center of Chinese
film-making. Shanghai’s film industry went on to blossom during the
early Thirties, generating Marilyn Monroe-like stars such as
Zhou Xuan. Another film star,
Jiang Qing, went on to become Madame
Mao Zedong. The talent and passion of
Shanghainese filmmakers following
World War
II and the
Communist
revolution in China contributed enormously to the development
of the
Hong Kong film
industry.
Many aspects of Shanghainese popular culture
("Shanghainese Pops") were transferred to Hong Kong
by the numerous Shanghainese emigrants and refugees
after the Communist Revolution. The movie
In the Mood for Love,
which was directed by Wong Kar-wai (a
native Shanghainese himself), depicts one slice of the displaced
Shanghainese community in Hong Kong
and the nostalgia for that era, featuring 1940s
music by Zhou Xuan.
Shanghai boasts several museums of regional and national
importance.
The Shanghai Museum
of art and history has one of the best collections
of Chinese historical artifacts in the world, including important
archaeological finds since 1949. The Shanghai Art Museum, located near
People's
Square
, is a major art museum holding both permanent and
temporary exhibitions. The
Shanghai Natural History
Museum is a large scale natural history museum.
In addition, there is
a variety of smaller, specialist museums, some housed in important
historical sites such as the site of the Provisional Government of the Republic of
Korea
and the site of the First National Congress of the
Communist Party of
China.

No.
4 of Hundred Thousand Scenes (十萬圖之四).
Painting by Ren Xiong, a pioneer of the Shanghai School of
Chinese art; ca. 1850.
The
Shanghai School (海上画派, Haishang
Huapai, which is shortened to 海派, Haipai) is a very important
Chinese school of traditional arts during the Qing Dynasty
and the whole of the twentieth century.
Under efforts of masters from this school, traditional Chinese art
reached another climax and continued to the present in forms of the
"
Chinese painting" (中国画) or
guohua (国画) for short. The Shanghai School challenged and
broke the literati tradition of Chinese art, while also paying
technical homage to the ancient masters and improving on existing
traditional techniques. Members of this school were themselves
educated literati who had come to question their very status and
the purpose of art, and had anticipated the impending modernization
of Chinese society. In an era of rapid social change, works from
the Shanghai School were widely innovative and diverse, and often
contained thoughtful yet subtle social commentary. The most
well-known figures from this school are
Qi
Baishi (齊白石),
Ren Xiong (任熊),
Ren Yi (任伯年),
Zhao
Zhiqian (赵之谦),
Wu Changshuo (吴昌硕),
Sha Menghai (沙孟海, calligraphist),
Pan Tianshou (潘天寿),
Fu Baoshi (傅抱石) and
Wang Zhen (王震). In literature, the
term was used in the 1930s by some
May Fourth Movement intellectuals,
notably
Zhou Zuoren and
Shen Congwen, as a derogatory label for the
literature produced in Shanghai at the time. They argued that
so-called Shanghai School literature was merely commercial and
therefore did not advance social progress. This became known as the
Jingpai (Beijing School) versus
Haipai (Shanghai
School) debate.
Songjiang
School (淞江派) is a small painting school during the Ming Dynasty
. It is commonly considered as a further
development of the Wu School, or Wumen School (吴门画派), in the then
cultural center of the region, Suzhou
.
Huating School (华亭派) was another important art school during the
middle to late Ming Dynasty. Its main achievements were in
traditional Chinese painting, calligraphy and poetry, and
especially famous for its Renwen painting (人文画).
Dong Qichang (董其昌) is one of the masters from
this school.
Shanghai's parks offer some reprieve from the urban jungle. Due to
the scarcity of play space for children, nearly all parks have a
children's section. Zhongshan Gongyuan in Downtown Shanghai is
famous for its monument of
Chopin, the
tallest statue dedicated to the composer in the world. Built in
1914 as Jessfield Park, it once contained the campus of
St. John's University,
Shanghai's first international college; today, it is known for its
extensive rose and peony gardens, a large children's play area, and
as the location of an important transfer station on the
city's metro system. One of the newest is in
the Xujiahui District, Xujiahui Gongyuan, built in 1999 on the
former grounds of the Great Chinese Rubber Works Factory and the
EMI Recording Studio (today's glamorous La Villa Rouge restaurant),
with entrances at Zhaojiabang Lu and in the west at the
intersection of Hengshang Lu and Yuqin Lu. The park has a man-made
lake with a sky bridge running across the park, and offers a
pleasant respite for Xujiahui shoppers.
Other Shanghainese cultural artifacts include the cheongsam
(Shanghainese:
zansae), a modernization of the traditional
Chinese/Manchurian
qipao ( ; fitting. This
contrasts sharply with the traditional qipao which was designed to
conceal the figure and be worn regardless of age. The cheongsam
went along well with the western overcoat and the scarf, and
portrayed a unique East Asian modernity, epitomizing the
Shanghainese population in general. As Western fashions changed,
the basic cheongsam design changed, too, introducing high-necked
sleeveless dresses, bell-like sleeves and, the black lace frothing
at the hem of a ball gown. By the 1940s, cheongsams came in
transparent black, beaded bodices, matching capes and even velvet.
And later, checked fabrics became also quite common. The 1949
Communist Revolution ended the cheongsam and other fashions in
Shanghai. However, the Shanghainese styles have seen a recent
revival as stylish party dresses. The fashion industry has been
rapidly revitalizing in the past decade, there is on average one
fashion show per day in Shanghai today. Like Shanghai's
architecture, local fashion designers strive to create a fusion of
western and traditional designs, often with innovative if
uncontroversial results.
Shanghai has hosted a number of world events, including the
2007 Summer Special
Olympics and a
Live Earth concert.
The
Shanghai
International Film Festival is annually held in the city.
The city
will be the host of the Expo
2010
World's Fair between
May and October 2010. Shanghai is also home to a number of
professional sports teams, including
Shanghai Shenhua of the
Chinese Super League, the
Shanghai Sharks of the
Chinese Basketball
Association, and the
Shanghai
Golden Eagles of the
China
Baseball League.
The city has also hosted the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix
at the Shanghai International
Circuit
every year since 2004.
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Shanghai is
twinned with:
- Yokohama, Japan
- since
1973
- Osaka, Japan
-
1974
- Milan
, Italy -
1979
- Rotterdam
, the
Netherlands -
1979
- San Francisco
, United
States - 1979
- Osaka Prefecture
, Japan -
1980
- Zagreb
, Croatia - 1980
- Hamhung
, North
Korea - 1982
- Manila
, Philippines - 1983
- Antwerp
, Belgium - 1984
Karachi , Pakistan - 1984
- Chicago
, United
States - 1985
- Montreal
, Canada -
1985
- Piraeus
, Greece -
1985
- Gdansk
, Poland -
1985
- Nagasaki Prefecture
, Japan -
1986
- Herat
, Afghanistan - 2008
|
|
- Hamburg
, Germany - 1986
- Casablanca
, Morocco - 1986
- Gothenburg
, Sweden - 1986
- Marseille
, France - 1987
- São Paulo
, Brazil - 1988
- Saint Petersburg
, Russia - 1988
- Istanbul
, Turkey - 1989
- Ho Chi Minh City
, Vietnam - 1990
- Alexandria
, Egypt -
1992
- Busan
, South
Korea - 1993
- Port
Vila
, Vanuatu - 1994
- Dunedin
, New
Zealand - 1994
- Haifa
, Israel - 1994
- Tashkent
, Uzbekistan - 1994
- Porto
, Portugal - 1995
|
|
- Aden
, Yemen - 1995
- Windhoek
, Namibia - 1995
- London
, United Kingdom - 1996
- Santiago de Cuba
, Cuba -
1996
- Rosario
, Argentina - 1997
- Espoo
, Finland - 1998
- Jalisco State
, Mexico - 1998
- Liverpool
, United Kingdom - 1999
- Maputo
, Mozambique - 1999
- Dubai
, United Arab Emirates - 2000
- Chiang Mai
, Thailand - 2000
- KwaZulu Natal, South Africa - 2001
- Guayaquil
, Ecuador - 2001
- Valparaiso
, Chile - 2001
- Barcelona
, Spain - 2001
|
|
- Oslo
, Norway - 2001
- Constanţa
, Romania - 2002
- Algiers
, Algeria - 2003
- Colombo
, Sri
Lanka - 2003
- Aarhus County,
Denmark
- 2003
- Bratislava
Region, Slovakia
- 2003
- Hauraki
District, New
Zealand
- 2003
- Salzburg
, Austria - 2004
- Lefkosia
, Cyprus - 2004
- Cork
, Ireland - 2005
- Winston-Salem
, United
States - 2006
- Basel
, Switzerland - 2007
- Nizhnevartovsk
, Russia - 2007
- Borås
, Sweden - 2007
- Sarajevo
, Bosnia and Herzegovina - 2008
|
See also
Notes
- Danielson, Eric N., Shanghai and the Yangzi Delta, 2004,
pp.8-9.
- Danielson, Eric N., Shanghai and the Yangzi Delta, 2004,
p.9.
- Danielson, Eric N., Shanghai and the Yangzi Delta, 2004, p.9,
pp.11-12, p.34.
- Danielson, Eric N., Shanghai and the Yangzi Delta, 2004,
p.10.
- Danielson, Eric N., Shanghai and the Yangzi Delta, 2004,
pp.10-11.
- Shanghai: Paradise for adventurers. CBC – TV.
Legendary Sin Cities.
- All About Shanghai. Chapter 4 – Population .
Tales of Old Shanghai.
- Danielson, Eric N., Shanghai and the Yangzi Delta, 2004,
p.34.
- « 149 comfort women houses discovered in
Shanghai », Xinhua, 16 June 2005.
-
http://www.shanghai.gov.cn/shanghai/node17256/node17432/node17437/index.html
- Expat Evolution: Is Shanghai's full-package expat
going extinct?. City Weekend Guide.
- According to Johnstone, Patrick; Schirrmacher, Thomas (2003).
Gebet für die Welt. Hänssler. ISBN 978-0813342757.
- Transportation - Shanghai Focus
- Pudong airport has most passengers from abroad (The Business
Times: 9 January 2007)
References
External links