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Shikumen Buildings Shanghai
Shikumen Buildings Shanghai is a Chinese and Western
style house hybrid of the early 20th century particular to Shanghai.
The 30,000-square-meter trendy entertainment complex is nestled in
the very center of the city, close to the bustling Huaihai Road C.,
the Huangpi Road S. Station of the Metro Line and the conjunction
of the north-south and east-west elevated roads.
Shikumen (literally meaning "stone-framed door") houses are unique
to Shanghai, and sadly disappearing all too fast in the face of rampant
development. Developed in the early 1900s to meet the housing demands
of booming old Shanghai, they are urban Western adaptations of traditional
Chinese courtyards - a writer once described them as Chinese houses
with a Parisian sensibility. Behind the stone-frame front door of
a shikumen house lies a small courtyard, which is itself enclosed
on the other sides by the building of the house. Xintiandi (literally meaning "new heaven and earth")
is an area south of Huaihai Zhong Lu where two blocks of old shikumen
houses have been restored and renovated to house upscale bars, restaurants
and shops. It is now a firm favourite hang-out place among visitors
and locals alike. One of these shikumen houses has been preserved
as a museum, the Shikumen Open House. You can wander through the re-created
rooms of a typical shikumen house, and there are anecdotal explanations
in English and Chinese of life in old Shanghai. There is also a small
exhibition of the development of Xintiandi. Entry fee is somewhat
steep at RMB20. Open daily 1000-2200.
History
of Shikumen
In the early 1900s, the Shikumen lanes were considered among the younger
generation as the ultimate examples of dilapidated, crowded and wretched
urban living. Luckily for the generations to follow, a few literary
masterpieces were written by writers infatuated with the lane's architecture
which introduced people to the hidden beauty of Shikumen.
The Stone-hooped doors and Shikumen
In the Shanghai dialect, wrapping or bundling is called 'hooping',
giving rise to phrases like 'hooping a bucket', so doors 'hooped'
by stone bars were called Stoned-hooped doors, and later the name
changed to Shikumen. Generally, the Shikumen-style buildings have
long bars of stones as doorframes and burly wooden planks as doors,
each fixed with a huge bronze ring.
The origin of Shikumen buildings can be traced back to the 1860s.
In 1860, the Taiping Rebels led by Li Xiucheng advanced east, conquering
a string of important towns in eastern China, causing an influx of
refugees from southern Jiangsu and northern Zhejiang into the foreign
settlements in Shanghai. To accommodate this inflax of refugees, local
merchants were encouraged to invest in housing for these people. To
use the limited land more efficiently, the houses built were in most
cases rows of Shikumen-style buildings.
These buildings reflect a mix of Chinese and foreign styles of architecture.
Shikumen-style buildings have certain elements of the west, but most
of the design and layout is in line with that of the "Jiangnan"
area of eastern China. Behind the Shikumen door is a courtyard, and
further inside is a living room, locally known as a parlour, and then
there is the back courtyard, kitchen and back door. To the sides of
the courtyard and the parlour are the right and left wing rooms. The
layout of the second storey is similar to the one below, but above
the kitchen is the garret, above which is a flat roof. The typical
buildings of the Shikumen style can be seen within
Xingrenli - an area of 1.33 square kilometers defined by the east
side of Henanzhong Road, Ningbo Road and Beijing Road; and also within
Dunrenli, Mianyangli and Jixiangli, all near the Xinmatou Street close
to Zhongshannan Road. 
After the early 1900s, Shanghai's households became smaller in size
and the residents' living patterns underwent major changes. The structure
and layout of the Shikumen-style houses also changed as a result.
Smaller units, without wing rooms and suitable for small households,
appeared, together with somewhat larger units with one parlour and
one wing room. These new two-or-three-storey Shikumen houses were
separated by lanes four meters wide. Humble "Tingzijian"
rooms were found at the turn of the staircases while verandahs were
added to the facades. After the 1920s, sewerage systems were installed.
Typical examples of such Shikumen buildings are the Jingan Villa on
Nanjingxi Road, and the Daluxin Villa on Shanyin Road.
After the 1930s, Shanghai faced a housing shortage, so the owners
of Shikumen-style buildings rented out some of the rooms. Since then
most Shikumen-style buildings have had their original layouts altered
and became mansions housing more than one family.
Life
in the Lanes
Shikumen-style houses formed the basis of the "Li Long"
(lane) community where private spheres and public spaces overlapped.
In this community, everyone knew everyone else's business. As the
density of the community rose, some family activities were often moved
to public spaces.
A valuable Architectural Legacy
At their peak, the Shikumen-style neighbourhoods numbered more than
9000 in Shanghai and took up 60 per cent of the total housing space
of the city. The Shikumen style, which has survived for more than
a century, is however no longer suitable for modern urban living.
Since the 1990s, Shanghai began a new wave of renovation and development,
demolishing many Shikumen-style buildings. It was only when more and
more of these houses were replaced by skyscrapers that people began
to realize such monuments of Shanghai's past deserve to be preserved.
Go
to the Xitiandi
Addresss: Huangpu
District
Admission Fee:
Opening
Hours:
Recommending Time for a Visit: 2 hours
Transportation:
Recommending
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