Feel the art beat.

By Mark Andrews

South China Morning Post. 14/03/2007

A look at Shanghai’s Tianzifang and how it is an alternative tourist destination in an increasingly glitzy chain ridden city.

Pudong may be upwardly mobile, but Shanghai is about more than just the next skyscraper. Across the Huangpu River in the former French Concession, artists, artisans and others with an eye for the unusual have made a home for themselves among the crumbling shikumen, or tenements. The area, which is about as pedestrianised as it can be on the mainland, is dotted with galleries, workshops and stores beneath the dripping washing of the families living above.

Shikumen, buildings with a combination of western and Chinese architectural influences that made up more than half of Shanghai’s housing in the first half of last century, are fast disappearing. Most of the two or three-storey houses once owned by a single family were divided into smaller units after the revolution.

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Mark Andrews has written about everything from Japanese houses to heli hikes on New Zealand glaciers, test drives of Chinese cars to bar and restaurant reviews. He currently specialises in travel articles and reviews of Chinese cars plus articles about the Chinese auto industry.

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