Items | Shanghai Hidden Histories Walking Tour: Suzhou Creek to The Bund
Shanghai Hidden Histories Walking Tour: Suzhou Creek to The Bund
(4) Reviews
Shanghai
Important Information
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Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
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Service animals allowed
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Public transportation options are available nearby
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Travelers should have at least a moderate level of physical fitness
Cancellation policy
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
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For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
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Cut-off times are based on the experience’s local time.
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If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.
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This experience requires a minimum number of travelers. If it’s canceled because the minimum isn’t met, you’ll be offered a different date/experience or a full refund.
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Any changes made less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time will not be accepted.
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This isn’t your typical bucket-list tour. It’s designed for curious minds, history lovers, and travelers who seek substance over spectacle. This is Shanghai at walking pace—authentic, insightful, and quietly powerful.
Led by a licensed local guide and passionate storyteller, this small-group experience offers a deeper look into Shanghai’s transformation from sleepy riverside town to global port city.
Perfect for: ✓ Thoughtful travelers who enjoy quiet observation and real conversation ✓ Visitors who want to move beyond sightseeing into meaning-making ✓ Guests seeking a personal, in-depth experience—not a student or free-tour guide
Highlights include: ✓ Suzhou Creek’s wartime and indus...
Highlights
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in Mandarin & English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in Mandarin & English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Group photo or self-portrait upon request (iphone, digital copy)
Licensed local English-speaking guide
Digital citywalk map
1 complimentary coffee at selected cafe or 1 bottled water per person upon request
Transportation to meeting point and return trip is excluded
Food or snacks are excluded (optional café stops at own cost)
Museum admission is excluded (if entered)
Meeting Points
Departure
245 Xin Zha Lu
Exit No.1, Xinzha Road Station (Metro Line 1), next to McDonalds
Look for Charlotte carrying a tote bag that says "Part-Time Human Being" — that's your guide for today!
Return
Swatch Art Peace Hotel
Riverside promenade on the Bund near East Nanjing Road
Itinerary
1
Sihang Warehouse Memorial Museum
A solemn riverside landmark. Once a battlefield, now a memorial. You’ll stand before the bullet-scarred walls where 400 Chinese soldiers held their ground in 1937—one of Shanghai’s most heroic wartime stands. The story lingers in the silence.
20 minutes
2
Yanqingli
Places like Yanqingli preserve this past while leaning into the future. Renovated interiors now hold cafés, galleries, and studios—breathing new life into once-forgotten spaces. It’s not just preservation; it’s quiet evolution.
Old walls, new stories.
5 minutes
3
Shanghai Post Museum
The building stood as a hub of international communication during the city’s treaty port era, symbolizing Shanghai’s gateway status—open to ideas, commerce, and people. It’s not just architecture; it’s a story of movement and connection.
Above the entrance, you’ll find an inscription by former President Jiang Zemin, reading:“中国邮政博物馆” (Zhongguo Youzheng Bowuguan – China Postal Museum)
4
Zhapulu Bridge
Zhapu Road Bridge is one of the oldest surviving steel bridges over Suzhou Creek, originally built in 1907. It played a crucial role in connecting the commercial hubs of Hongkou and Huangpu, witnessing over a century of Shanghai’s transformation—from treaty port chaos to cosmopolitan calm.
Its trussed steel frame makes it a favorite for photographers, especially in the golden light of late afternoon. Framed by old warehouses on one side and modern towers beyond, it captures the visual story of a city in motion.
To truly appreciate its value, pause at mid-span. Look east, toward the Waibaidu Bridge and the curve of the creek. You’ll see more than buildings—you’ll see how Shanghai holds its contrasts: steel and water, history and tomorrow, stillness and surge.
Take a photo—but also take a moment.
20 minutes
5
Waibaidu Bridge
Waibaidu Bridge, built in 1908, is Shanghai’s first all-steel bridge and the oldest surviving one in the city. Spanning the mouth of Suzhou Creek where it meets the Huangpu River, it once marked the threshold between the International Settlement and the old Chinese city—where East met West, and boundaries were both drawn and crossed.
In photos, its latticed steel beams frame a perfect contrast: behind it rise the colonial facades of the Bund, and across the river, the futuristic skyline of Lujiazui. It’s one of the most iconic photo spots in all of Shanghai.
For a deeper appreciation, walk slowly across at sunset. Notice how the river reflects not just light, but time. Think of traders, soldiers, lovers, and dreamers who have crossed it over a century. This isn’t just a bridge—it’s a city’s memory in steel.
15 minutes
6
The Bund (Wai Tan)
The Bund is more than a scenic promenade—it's the face of Shanghai’s modern history. Stretching along the west bank of the Huangpu River, its grand colonial buildings once housed banks, trading houses, and consulates from Britain, France, the U.S., and beyond.
Built mostly between the 1880s and 1930s, the architecture is a mix of neoclassical, baroque, art deco—a frozen skyline of international ambition. It tells the story of a city that was once called the “Paris of the East.”
It’s also one of the world’s most photographed places. From here, you can frame the contrast: old world facades to the west, the space-age towers of Lujiazui to the east. Day or night, the view stuns.
To truly feel it, come in the blue hour—just after sunset. Watch the lights come alive across the river, listen to the hum of the city behind you, and let the river breeze carry the stories. Don’t rush. Let it sink in.
15 minutes
Shanghai Hidden Histories Walking Tour: Suzhou Creek to The Bund
(4) Reviews
Shanghai
About
This isn’t your typical bucket-list tour. It’s designed for curious minds, history lovers, and travelers who seek substance over spectacle. This is Shanghai at walking pace—authentic, insightful, and quietly powerful.
Led by a licensed local guide and passionate storyteller, this small-group experience offers a deeper look into Shanghai’s transformation from sleepy riverside town to global port city.
Perfect for: ✓ Thoughtful travelers who enjoy quiet observation and real conversation ✓ Visitors who want to move beyond sightseeing into meaning-making ✓ Guests seeking a personal, in-depth experience—not a student or free-tour guide
Highlights include: ✓ Suzhou Creek’s wartime and indus...
Highlights
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in Mandarin & English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
From 3 hours to 4 hours
Offered in Mandarin & English
Free Cancellation
Mobile Ticket
What's Included
Group photo or self-portrait upon request (iphone, digital copy)
Licensed local English-speaking guide
Digital citywalk map
1 complimentary coffee at selected cafe or 1 bottled water per person upon request
Transportation to meeting point and return trip is excluded
Food or snacks are excluded (optional café stops at own cost)
Museum admission is excluded (if entered)
Meeting Points
Departure
245 Xin Zha Lu
Exit No.1, Xinzha Road Station (Metro Line 1), next to McDonalds
Look for Charlotte carrying a tote bag that says "Part-Time Human Being" — that's your guide for today!
Return
Swatch Art Peace Hotel
Riverside promenade on the Bund near East Nanjing Road