Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Chinese Character - Tobacco Pipe Lane, Hotspot of Beijing



NI HAO from China






E-ZINE / Where to Enjoy






Tobacco Pipe Lane, Hotspot of Beijing


Updated: 2007-05-17 08:54







Recording the Disappearing Old Beijing

A group of people, take up their cameras and rush ahead of the
bulldozers, trying to save bits of the memories contained in the
centuries-old lanes...

The full text is available on page 52-57 of



Tempted by the rare rather than the usual, many global travellers
overlook what the guidebooks eagerly suggest, and this can be a mistake;
the rare can lay just at the borders of the usual.

Yandai Xie Jie (Tobacco Pipe Lane) and Liulichang Market are two places
that attract great bands of tourists, both night and day. But by hanging
back from the crowd and lingering a little, letting the cooling breeze of
a spring day draw you from the beaten track, you can experience some
unexpected delights.

One of the hotspots of Beijing's nightlife, Yandai Xie Jie has the air of
a briefly vacated party if visited on a weekday morning before the crowds
arrive. Xie Jies are celebrated in Beijing for their human scale and
meandering form, and approached from Di'anmen Avenue this one winds like
a broken stream between two great tourist spots: Yin Ding Qiao to the
east and Drum and Bell Tower at Gu Lou to the west.



Now something of a rarity in Beijing, the Xie Jie recalls a time when the
city was almost entirely composed of narrow winding streets. With the
demands of expansion, and the needs of motor vehicles, Beijing's roads
were fully redeveloped in 1979 using a grid system and the remaining Xie
Jie now act, quite literally, as a path back in time.

Tobacco Pipe Lane (Yandai Xie Jie) dates back to the Ming Dynasty
(1368-1644) and once sold pipes and accoutrements. Street-side research
will tell you that the name comes from its curved, pipe-stem-like shape.

Turning from Di'anmen Avenue, the history of Yandai Xie Jie pulls you
down its narrow, flagstone laneway and throws you in the path of speeding
pedicabs that ferry tourists more inclined to rest than to walk. There
are old buildings that house contemporary "fusion" shops, selling clothes
and music and cutting hair, and newly renovated buildings that display
the ancient traditions of ethnic craft with wall hangings, woodcarving
and batik.


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