West side stories

Updated: 2012-12-20 10:14

By Raymond Zhou (China Daily)

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West side stories

Liwan Creek is Guangzhou's new attraction where visitors can chance upon a wedding procession or a dragon-boat race.

If you're a movie buff, you've surely seen some of the 180-something kung fu flicks that feature the indomitable fighter Huang Feihong. It turns out he was not only a real historical figure, but spent 60 years practicing medicine - starting from 1863 - in Xiguan.

Even though most of the screen stories are fictional, you can still be imbued with the authentic flavor of an era when Western influence seeped into China and sometimes created a fascinating hybrid.

Saunter south across a bridge, you'll find yourself in the small island of Shamian, where 19th-century European architecture reigned supreme.

Once a British and French concession, the 0.3-sq-km island had churches, consulates and banks. Now, it is mostly cafes and hotels, the most famous being White Swan Hotel, a landmark from the early 1980s.

Here, the pace of life is even slower, and one may not find it strange to sit on a bench for hours, gawking at boats that cruise up and down the river, as I did many times when I was living in the city.

Imagine old-style barges with sails, and you'll get a picture of late 19th-century or early 20th-century Guangzhou with the hustle and bustle befitting the earliest Chinese city to open to the world.

Contact the writer at raymondzhou@chinadaily.com.cn.

West side stories

Liwan Creek is Guangzhou's new attraction where visitors can chance upon a wedding procession or a dragon-boat race.

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