Gucheng Park

Coordinates: 31°13′43″N 121°29′38″E / 31.2285°N 121.4939°E / 31.2285; 121.4939
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Gucheng Park
Park sign, 2015
Gucheng Park is located in Shanghai
Gucheng Park
TypePark
Location333 Renmin Road (by Fuyou Road)
Nearest cityShanghai, China
Coordinates31°13′43″N 121°29′38″E / 31.2285°N 121.4939°E / 31.2285; 121.4939
Created2002

Gucheng Park is a park located at the east end of Renmin Road in Shanghai, China. It was established in 2002.[1] It is known as "Park of the Old City."[2]

Description[edit]

It is located in downtown Shanghai’s Huangpu District, between Yuyuan Garden and the Bund.[2] It is known as the Park of the Old City due to its location in an area where an old city wall was built.[2] One can take Metro Line 10 or Line 14 to Yuyuan Garden. From Exit 3 there's another 10 minutes' walk.

The park is home to a sunken plaza, a tea-house in a bamboo forest, a fishpond, and a lawn with topiary. An old kitchen in located in the park. After the park was reconstructed, residents living in old shikumen (stone-gate) houses had to relocate. A kitchen from one house was preserved and is now displayed in the park. It features a cement sink, old-style taps and blue-stone floor. There is a small bamboo copse located close to the preserved kitchen. There is an outdoor tea-house located in the park where tables and chairs are surrounded by high trees.[2] The mansion of the South Shanghai Bankers’ Club is located close to the tea-house that was built in 1883. It is a dark gray-and-white traditional Chinese-style mansion and is the location where first generation of bankers in Shanghai met.[2] Parts of the old city walls in Shanghai have been reconstructed in Gucheng Park and Danfeng Deck -an observation deck- was built on the original location of Danfeng Tower (a Taoist temple built between 1265 and 1274 which was the highest point in Shanghai a few hundred years back, being demolished in 1912).

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Parks of Shanghai – Gucheng Park 古城公园". HKS. February 26, 2015. Archived from the original on 4 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e "'Park of the Old City' full of surprises and solitude". SHINE. Archived from the original on 2022-02-01. Retrieved 2020-05-10.

External links[edit]