Archives For Hutong

Finding a good Hotel in Beijing can be tricky, but here is a list of good Hutong guest-house suggestions:

The Hutong Area

[Beijing's earliest hutongs date back to the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368) and when the New China was founded in 1949, there were some 6,000 of them. But because of the city's rapid development, thousands of them have been demolished to make way for new apartment buildings.]

Probably the most special and original local guest house in Beijing, The guest house is so fantastic. It hides behind the street, deeply and quietly in a Hutong (historical narrow alley) and Si He Yuan (a kind of old style Chinese house), full of Beijng’s local taste. It impresses with its beautiful garden courtyard, super clean western style bathrooms, brand new bedding and facilities, individually controlled air-conditioning, city center location and super convenient public transportations, considerable service and travelling arrangements, etc. Of course, warm English speaking staff is more essential.

Living in Hutong area hotel can help you get a better understanding of Beijing’s local life. You could never get the same feeling and traveling experience from any other places. Wandering in the long and puzzling hutong, smiling to lovely local neighbors, seeing the blue sky in the no-roof courtyard, hearing the whistle from swiftly flying-by doves, watering the garden, walking the dog, they may give you ‘a glimpse of what life in the city is really like’.

In one word, once you are here, you will be here again.

Chapter I – A Disappearing World

In the face of China’s rapid modernization, the world’s most populous country is struggling to preserve its cultural heritage, and nowhere is this more visible than in the ancient alleyways and courtyards of Beijing.

Once a ubiquitous feature of Beijing, the hutongs are more than simply housing; they are actually a way of life. Entire families live in single, crowded courtyards, often with no bathrooms. Yet despite the lack of modern amenities, the communal aspect to life within the hutongs means that few want to leave – even as their neighbourhoods are being demolished and redeveloped. UNESCO estimates that more than 88 percent of the city’s old residential quarters are already gone, most torn down in the last three decades.

In a three-part series, filmmakers Jonah Kessel and Kit Gillet explore the vanishing world of Beijing’s hutongs, the realities of life within the narrow streets, and the future for these culturally-irreplaceable areas of China’s capital.

CHAPTER ONE: For many residents, hutong life is all they have ever known, and their memories and lives are intertwined strongly with the old streets and alleyways. Yet as time has gone by, many of the courtyards have become overcrowded and the buildings themselves have deteriorated. Despite the cultural heritage of the hutongs thousands of them have been razed in the past decades to make way for urban development destroying centuries of history and contributing to the shrinking of the remaining hutong space.

The Fate of Old Beijing: CH. 1 – A Disappearing World from Jonah Kessel on Vimeo.

Chapter II – David vs. Goliath

In the face of China’s rapid modernization, the world’s most populous country is struggling to preserve its cultural heritage, and nowhere is this more visible than in the ancient alleyways and courtyards of Beijing.

Once a ubiquitous feature of Beijing, the hutongs are more than simply housing; they are actually a way of life. Entire families live in single, crowded courtyards, often with no bathrooms. Yet despite the lack of modern amenities, the communal aspect to life within the hutongs means that few want to leave – even as their neighbourhoods are being demolished and redeveloped. UNESCO estimates that more than 88 percent of the city’s old residential quarters are already gone, most torn down in the last three decades.

In a three-part series, filmmakers Jonah Kessel and Kit Gillet explore the vanishing world of Beijing’s hutongs, the realities of life within the narrow streets, and the future for these culturally-irreplaceable areas of China’s capital.

CHAPTER TWO: While hutong residents may not have the easiest lives, few want to leave the streets and alleyways they have long called home. However, with China’s current legal system offering few avenues of discourse it is hard for residents to save their homes after they have been slated for demolition. Some are torn down to make way for new subway lines but, increasingly, a large number are simply torn down to be replaced by large high rise buildings that primarily benefit the land developers and local officials.

The Fate of Old Beijing: CH. 2 – David vs. Goliath from Jonah Kessel on Vimeo.

Chapter III – Beyond the Alleys

In the face of China’s rapid modernization, the world’s most populous country is struggling to preserve its cultural heritage, and nowhere is this more visible than in the ancient alleyways and courtyards of Beijing.

Once a ubiquitous feature of Beijing, the hutongs are more than simply housing; they are actually a way of life. Entire families live in single, crowded courtyards, often with no bathrooms. Yet despite the lack of modern amenities, the communal aspect to life within the hutongs means that few want to leave – even as their neighbourhoods are being demolished and redeveloped. UNESCO estimates that more than 88 percent of the city’s old residential quarters are already gone, most torn down in the last three decades.

In a three-part series, filmmakers Jonah Kessel and Kit Gillet explore the vanishing world of Beijing’s hutongs, the realities of life within the narrow streets, and the future for these culturally-irreplaceable areas of China’s capital.

CHAPTER THREE: If Beijing’s hutong areas are to be retained in one form or another, decisions need to be made about whether to invest money in keeping the original structures or replacing them with replicas built in the same style but offering modern amenities – a move that many suggest destroys the soul of the buildings. While for former hutong residents forced or happily leaving their old homes, a new way of life beckons.

The Fate of Old Beijing: CH. 3 – Beyond the Alleys from Jonah Kessel on Vimeo.

(Blog posted by Jonah Kessel on Jan 24, 2011. You can see the original article by following this link to Vimeo)

Nanluoguxiang

john —  February 21, 2012

Foreigners living in and traveling to Beijing frequent areas like Qian’men, Sanlitun and Houhai for shopping, drinking and other fun activities. However, there are many somewhat hidden places that have much to offer like Nanluoguxiang located in the Dongcheng District near the Drum Tower (GuLou 鼓楼).

Nanluoguxiang is a traditional-style hutong (alley) that has been renovated and filled with small shops, cafes, hostels and bars. It attracts both young and old, Chinese and foreigners with its range of offerings. A few of my favorite places around Nanluoguxiang are C Rock Record Shop (located on Gulou East Ave), Plastered T-Shirts, The Pass By Bar and 12SQM Bar. If you’re shopping for a more alternative, hipper style this area is perfect with a lot of music inspired clothing.

While Nanluoguxiang’s tourist traffic has dramatically increased over the past few years, the quint feel of this hutong and others around it are still perfect for a weekend stroll. For more pictures, please see our Nanluoguxiang photo album.

(Blog contributed by TheBJReviewer on July 5, 2011. You can see the original article by following this link to TheBJReviewer)

Related photos:

Nanluogu Xiang in the Dongcheng district, once a thriving neighborhood of mismatched courtyard houses and shopfronts, is now lined with T-shirt shops and cafes catering to tourists. (Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times)

A newly renovated hutong house near Nanluogu Xiang in Beijing.(Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times)

Related articles:

Baochao Rising: Secrets of Beijing’s Hidden Hutong

Wudaokou: Beijing’s Multi-Cultural Milieu or a Foreign Student Fortress?

Beijing Hutongs

john —  February 21, 2012

The Qianmen hutong area at twilight.(Photo: Ruth Fresmon/NYTimes.)

Hutongs, narrow lanes or alleys lines by courtyard housing, form traditional residential fabric in the historic center of Beijing. The Hutong — the term is derived from the Mongolian word hottog (water well) — came into being during the Yuan dynasty (1271 to 1368), when China was absorbed into the Mongol Empire. Most of Beijing’s remaining Hutongs date back to the Ming dynasty (1368 to 1644), which established Beijing as its capital city in 1421 on the site of the original Yuan capital.(From NYTimes.)

Starting in the 1960s, however, as Beijing’s population soared, three or four extended families were often packed into a courtyard house that had once been occupied by a single family. (Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times)

One of Beijing’s many labyrinthine hutongs — neighborhoods made up of alleys lined with courtyard houses that wind away from the boulevards and public squares. (Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times)

A man beside his partly demolished home in one of Beijing’s classic hutong neighborhoods. The rapid encroachment of the modern city has preservationists alarmed. (By Nicolai Ouroussoff for NYTimes)

Liu Heung Shing, a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist, owns a siheyuan off a hutong just north of the Forbidden City. “Chinese believe that in a siheyuan you can feel the spirit of the earth,” he said, “because unlike in a high-rise apartment, you step on it every day.” (Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times)

The hutong neighborhoods date to the 13th century, when Beijing’s chessboard grid was created. The layout of the neighborhoods, with public life spilling into alleyways and private life hidden behind brick walls, remained largely unchanged in the first decade or so after the Communist takeover in 1949. (Photo: Shiho Fukada for The New York Times)

Men play Chinese Chess on a new sidewalk in the Qianmen area, one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods. Plans for development have created a battleground in this area known for its opera houses, provincial guilds and bordellos. (Aaron and Mimi Kuo-Deemer for NYTimes.)

The entrance of the Côté Cour hotel.

The Hutongs

john —  February 18, 2012

A paramilitary police station on a hutong near Culture Square

Hutongs are small alley ways or lanes surrounding the Forbidden City in the old section of Beijing that are hundreds of years old. These hutongs provide a tantalizing insight into life in ancient Beijing and a glimpse of modern Beijing’s traditional life.

A typical residence in ancient Beijing was a walled compound with a courtyard yard in the center that was surrounded by living quarters that were built against the north east and west walls of the compound. The southern wall of the compound was the gateway and entrance to the residence. Typically one family of at least three generations lived in a residence and the courtyard was the focus point of the family.

A hutong is formed by a row of these traditional residences the same way a suburban street is formed by a row of houses and yards. The residences faced south for better light and heat so hutongs normally run on a east to west axis.

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