Nanjing Road

Location

Shanghai
China
31° 14' 5.0496" N, 121° 28' 29.4672" E
CN
General info: 

Nanjing Road has traditionally been regarded as ‘China’s number one shopping street’. It spans over 3.4 miles and offers some of the finest and most expensive goods from China and abroad.

After the Opium War (1839-1842), Shanghai became a treaty port and Nanjing Road became the first shopping street of the city. Today the area has over 600 shops and the street is an all weather pedestrian arcade.

The famous brands and new fashion are here but there are still approximately a hundred traditional stores and specialty shops still provide choice silk goods, jade, embroidery, wool, and clocks. Restaurants, theatres, and international hotels have mushroomed on both sides of the street.

Getting there: 

Take the Metro on Line 1, 2 or 8 and get off at People's Square Station.

You might be interested in

The Hermitage is the biggest art museum in Russia and is one of the must-visit places in St. Petersburg.

St. Petersburg lies at the confluence of the river Neva and the Gulf of Finland. The terrain earned the city its nickname – the Venice of the North.

The Palace Square has been the central point of St. Petersburg since the city was built. On this place many significant events happened, including the October Revolution that changed the modern world.

Budapest is the city created by merging two separate cities on the opposite banks of the Danube River. To make the links between Buda and Pest strong, the city officials built the most impressive buildings near the river.

Hungarians are very proud of their history. Their country exists more than one millennium and their first king takes a special place in Hungarian history.

Castle Hill is placed high above the city on the Buda side. In the 13th century, Mongolian tribes were advancing from the east to the Europe, leaving only death and horror behind.