Aldous Huxley, writing in the 1930s, called Shanghai “life itself”. These days, the famed opium dens have gone, along with the colourful gangsters, White Russian émigrés, sing-song bar girls and fugitives from justice who made Shanghai one of the most disreputable places on Earth in the 1920s and 1930s.
Huge tracts of the old city have been pulled down, replaced by wave upon wave of high-rise apartments – constructed to house a population heading towards 30 million – and fantasy skyscrapers that resemble gargantuan robots or hovering spaceships. Yet, in many ways, the city is unchanged; a glitzy boom town for opportunists, a place of unimaginable excess and humble poverty, where every corner you turn offers something in stark contrast to the one before and traces of the past linger like the smoke of joss sticks in the yellow, polluted air.
It’s still possible to experience historic Shanghai in the French Concession, its lane houses and beautiful streets canopied with plane trees. Get your bearings with Shanghai Insiders on an exhilarating ride in the sidecar of a vintage motorbike. Ask your guide to stop at Xiangyang Lu, to taste the city’s heralded street food, such as the famous soup dumplings, xiaolongbao.
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Please note that this article was written a few years ago, and some of the information may be outdated. If you have any new or updated information on this topic, feel free to share experiences or ask questions, someone may know the answer and be able to help you.
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