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
4.0 based on 27 reviews
Well it looks nice, however it only opens at 10.00 when the mall opens but there is a lot that really sucks, and though a Starbucks in China, too much adapting local goes too far away from Starbuck standard quality. - I did not ask for take away, I said with my Venti Latte, to drink here and the good thing was the guy did speak some English, but I got a plastic take away cup, which is wasting extra plastics - The latte was far too hot, I not only burned my hands, as they do not automatically put the ring around, against hot cups, but squeezed the cup, as the plastic was so floppy and soft, the cup spilt and turned over, my 5 $ latte was all over the counter, no one reacted, so I bought a new one. - no almond milk, they do have Soya but I do not take that - Internet is supposed to be free all over Starbucks, worldwide, well here a in so many other places you need to have a Chinese number to fill in a code, as it does not work with foreign numbers meaning you cannot get on the internet. I asked if hey could provide me with a local number to get a code, but they said they could not (In hotels and other shops I did get a number where I could have a code sent to get on internet.
3.0 based on 1 reviews
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