Heilongjiang (Chinese: 黑龙江; pinyin: Hēilóngjiāng, Wade-Giles: Heilungkiang) is a province of the People's Republic of China. Located in the northeastern part of the country, Heilongjiang is bordered by Jilin to the south and Inner Mongolia to the west. It also shares a China–Russia border with Russia to the north and east. The capital and the largest city of the province is Harbin. Among Chinese provincial-level administrative divisions, Heilongjiang is the sixth-largest by total area and the 15th-most populous.
Restaurants in Heilongjiang
5.0 based on 131 reviews
See the magical world of Harbin's ICE and SNOW with an experienced local tour guide: See the world-famous ICE FESTIVAL as well as other attractions including the Snow Festival on Sunisland ,Siberian Tiger Park ,Harbin Polarland, Dragon Tower(Tong Ta), Zhongyang Pedestrian Street, St.Sophia Church and Ice Lanten Show Festival at Zhaolin Park , Ice Swimming Show , Snow Skiing, Hot Spring , Unit 731 Museum and Volga Manor We can also provide pick-up and drop-off services as well as translation and interpretation (Chinese - English) Any local reservations can be organized. Tours can be tailor-made to your requirements.
4.5 based on 151 reviews
It is one of the more sad place in my trip, it was"cruel war against human nature itself".the human cruetly, you can read from this museum and site. It is good to know these here.
4.5 based on 53 reviews
A private Harbin tour is an enjoyable way of seeing Harbin and its top attractions, such as Ice and Snow World, Sun Island International Snow Sculpture Art Expo, and the Siberian Tiger Park.
4.5 based on 1,056 reviews
Also known as Central Street (中央大街), this is a pedestrian street with its unique cobblestones. It is about 1.5km in length, lined with shops, restaurants and street vendors. Come here to appreciate the many old buildings, with Russian & European architectures. Recommend to try the ice cream stick from one of the many street vendors. Suggest to visit this street in the evening to experience the lightings and shopping atmosphere.
4.5 based on 770 reviews
Sun Island is the island across the river from Harbin and in the summer months is a nice park with walks and the perfect place to picnic...but in winter it is home to the Harbin ice and snow festival parks. The island is accessible by road or cablecar (or walking across the frozen river in winter). We enjoyed our time on the island...very relaxing and very spectacular with the ice sculptures.
4.5 based on 141 reviews
Went here with my wife and 5 year old on a feb via a private tour. As expected, place is very cold so prepare proper winter attire. The snow sculptures were amazing and some are really grand in scale. Aside from admiring the sculptures there are also fun activities for young and adults to enjoy. Highly recommend this pace if you visit harbin in winter
4.5 based on 68 reviews
Visited and stayed here for 2 nights. It was a wonderful experience but the cold can be Super cold like -27 deg Celsius. We had to wear at least 4 to 5 layers on top and 3 layers pants. There are skiing, tubing down slopes, horse and dog sleds... but I didn’t go for animal rides. I just spent RMB 50 per person to enjoy unlimited tubes down the slopes and it was fun enough. Visiting China Snow Town can be very cheap. But as I browse through the internet and travel apps, the tours are quite expensive for the same travel period. I DIY-ed and it was a lot cheaper. Be careful of tour agencies, chartered car Drivers trying to recommend you “cheaper tickets” and pushing you to buy snow activity packages at cheaper rates... just don’t get conned. They have a Long list of activities, but if the weather is Super cold I doubt I could last Long out in the cold to complete those activities anyway. There’s village procession and fireworks every night. All in all, this is a wonderful place to visit.
4.5 based on 1,494 reviews
The Harbin ice festival is something that simply has to be done...it is the world's largest ice and snow festival, and with around 20 million visitors in just three months that it is open may seem like it is going to be crazy busy, but we visited early February and it didn't seem overly busy at all. The sites are so vast that there is always space to see the sculptures and take photos. The sculptures are simply unbelievable and the size of some of them is staggering...it is so colourful and spectacular that it is almost too much for the ocular nerve to take in. I really cannot enthuse enough how visually amazing the whole thing is...and pictures simply don't do it justice...so definitely definitely try and fit this in at some point if you are visiting China in the winter months. A few tips: The trains to Harbin may be a lot cheaper than flying but they take about four times as long to get there and are almost always fully booked...I would recommend flying into Harbin and paying the extra...the Chinese budget airlines are perfectly fine (we flew Spring and everything was perfect). Don't forget thermals, heat packs, gloves and warm anti-slip boots...you will need them. It was around -20ºC at night when we were there, and the ice festival has an ice floor and ice sculptures so will feel even colder...and you will be on the island pretty much all day if you want to see everything. When to visit? I recommend visiting early afternoon the snow sculpture park (this will take about two hours) then head to the main entrance and get a taxi to the ice sculpture park (it will cost about 20 yuan (£2))...and hopefully you will be there before dusk to see the sun setting and the statues lighting up. The ice park you will probably be there for 3 hours or so...you are looking at about 7 hours in total...there are food places in both parks. The easiest way to get there is by taxi which will cost you just a a few yuan from Harbin...but bear in mind that almost nobody in Harbin speaks English (not even a few words) and so they obviously can't read English either. I recommend getting the translation in pinyin or in Chinese characters of the destination of your journey and showing that to the taxi driver to avoid any problems. You will no doubt have WeChat on your phone if you are in China and there is a good translate function on there you can use. Another tip is that I recommend you go to the toilet before heading to the ice festival park...as the toilets are pretty rancid, and by "pretty rancid" I mean absolutely disgusting with faeces literally everywhere. Not a pretty sight. Use the toilets at the snow sculpture park as these were clean and well looked after....but if you have to go at the ice park...then make sure you take toilet tissues as they are unlikely to have any left. So there you go...a few handy tips that we discovered when there...now it is up to you to visit this once in a lifetime visual extravaganza. Just do it...!!!
4.5 based on 148 reviews
we went to Volga Manor on 5-12-2019 by taxi. We spent 4.5 hours including travel time and paid taxi 500yuan. We got the taxi at the taxi stop near to our apartment at the city. The fare was a bit expensive. The entrance fee is 100Yuan not including lunch.
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