The largest city in China is also its most cosmopolitan, offering visitors a chance to experience the past, present, and future all at once. The Huangpu River splits Shanghai into two districts: Pudong and Puxi. The Pudong skyline looks like it was ripped from the Jetsons, with the bulbous Oriental Pearl TV and Radio Tower looking a bit like a two headed lollipop. On the Puxi side, you can walk the Bund riverside district to get a taste of old Shanghai.
Restaurants in Shanghai
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Co-founded by Shanghai XinHua Distribution Group and Red Star Macalline Group, Pearl Art Museum (PAM) is an art institution for exhibitions, education and research, promoting art and cultural communications. PAM is designed by Japanese master architect Tadao Ando, and along with the XinHua Bookstore on the lower floor, the duplex arts space is named “Light Space”.
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Known as the “Hollywood in Shanghai,” it was where the renowned Chinese movie studios, including Lianhua, Diantong, Xinhua, Kunlun, Wenhua, Haiyan, and Tianma, were successively born from the 1930s. On November 16, 1949, the Shanghai Film Studio was established here, which would become one of the three largest film production centres in China. Shanghai Film Museum was opened to the public in June, 2013 on the former site of the Shanghai Film Studio. Covering a total exhibition area of 15,000 m2, the museum is a major showcase of China’s film production that features integrated functions of display and interactive visiting experience, serving the needs of archival collection, academic research and public education.
If you loves the history of films or fans of Chinese films, this is a must place to visit But if you're not both, you will find this place too boring
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