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Beijing introduction
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Some hotels and Beijing introduction

Beijing Hotel & Resort Guide:
Beijing Hotel Beijing

Beijing Hotel, a historical landmark of Beijing, is a five-star hotel located well in downtown Beijing city near to the shopping district at Wang Fu Jing Street and at walking distance to Tian An Men Square and the Forbidden City, Beijing hotel is ideally situated to let its guests see the best and most Beijing.
Established in 1900. The hotel was recently renovated ; providing extra amenities and comfort to its guest while preserving the rich elegance of its Chinese architecture.

Address: 33 East Changan Avenue Dongcheng District Beijing 100006 Beijing

Beijing Hotel & Resort Guide:
Renaissance Beijing Hotel

Ideally located in the heart of the city. Just few minutes away from the Embassy District. Easy access to major freeways, The hotel is also located in Chaoyang Business District which is considered to be the future home of commerce of Beijing. 212 superbly equipped rooms with 58 suites tastefully designed to the business travellers with voice mail and broadband provide added convenience and satellite TV.

 

The brash modernity of BEIJING (the name means "northern capital") comes as a surprise to many visitors. Traversed by freeways (it's the proud owner of more than a hundred flyovers) and spiked with highrises, this vivid metropolis is Beijing at its most dynamic. For the last thousand years, the drama of Beijing's imperial history was played out here, with the emperor sitting enthroned at the centre of the Chinese universe, and though today the city is a very different one, it remains spiritually and politically the heart of the country. Between the swathes of concrete and glass, you'll find some of the lushest temples, and certainly the grandest remnants of the Imperial Age. Unexpectedly, some of the country's most pleasant scenic spots lie within the scope of a day-trip, and, just to the north of the city, is one of Beijing's most famous sights, the old boundary line between civilizations, the Great Wall.

First impressions of Beijing are of an almost inhuman vastness, conveyed by the sprawl of identical apartment buildings in which most of the city's population of twelve million are housed, and the eight-lane freeways that slice it up. It's an impression that's reinforced on closer acquaintance, from the magnificent Forbidden City, with its stunning wealth of treasures, the concrete desert of Tian'anmen Square and the gargantuan buildings of the modern executive around it, to the rank after rank of new office complexes that line its mammoth roads. Outside the centre, the scale becomes more manageable, with parks, narrow alleyways and ancient sites such as the Yonghe Gong, Observatory and, most magnificent of all, the Temple of Heaven, offering respite from the city's oppressive orderliness and rampant reconstruction. In the suburbs beyond, the two Summer Palaces and the Western Hills have been favoured retreats since imperial times.

Beijing is an invaders' city, the capital of oppressive foreign dynasties - the Manchu and the Mongols - and of a dynasty with a foreign ideology - the Communists. As such, it has assimilated a lot of outside influence, and today it is perhaps the most cosmopolitan part of Beijing, with an international flavour reflecting its position as the capital of a major commercial power. As the front line of Beijing's grapple with modernity it is being ripped up and rebuilt at a furious pace - attested by the cranes that skewer the skyline and the white character chai ("demolish") painted on old buildings. Students in the latest baggy fashions while away their time in Internet cafés and McDonald's, drop outs spike their hair and mosh in punk clubs, businessmen are never without their laptops and schoolkids carry mobile phones in their lunchboxes. Red-light districts and gay bars are appearing as the city hits its own sexual revolution. Rising incomes have led not just to a consumer-capitalist society Westerners will feel very familiar with, but also to a revival of older Chinese culture - witness the re-emergence of the teahouse as a genteel meeting place and the interest in imperial cuisine. In the evening you'll see large groups of the older generation performing the yangkou (loyalty dance), Chairman Mao's favourite dance universally learned a few decades ago, and in the hutongs, the city's twisted grey stone alleyways, men sit with their birds and pipes as they always have done.

Beijing is a city that almost everyone enjoys. For new arrivals it provides a gentle introduction to the country and for travellers who've been roughing it round outback Beijing, the creature comforts on offer are a delight. It's home to a huge expat population, and it's quite possible to spend years here eating Western food, dancing to Western music, and socializing with like-minded foreigners. Beijing is essentially a private city, and one whose surface is difficult to penetrate; sometimes it seems to have the superficiality of a theme park. Certainly there is something mundane about the way tourist groups are efficiently shunted around, plugged from hotel to sight, with little contact with everyday reality. To get deeper into the city, wander what's left of the labyrinthine hutongs, "fine and numerous as the hairs of a cow" (as one Chinese guidebook puts it), and check out the little antique markets, the residential shopping districts, the smaller, quirkier sights, and the parks, some of the best in Beijing, where you'll see Beijingers performing tai ji and hear birdsong - just - over the hum of traffic. Take advantage, too, of the city's burgeoning nightlife and see just how far the Chinese have gone down the road of what used to be called spiritual pollution.

If the Party had any control over it, no doubt Beijing would have the best climate of any Chinese city; as it is, it has one of the worst. The best time to visit is in autumn, between September and October, when it's dry and clement. In winter it gets very cold, down to minus 20°C, and the mean winds that whip off the Mongolian plains feel like they're freezing your ears off. Summer (June-August) is muggy and hot, up to 30°C, and the short spring (April & May) is dry but windy.

Getting to Beijing is no problem. As the centre of Beijing's transport network you'll probably wind up here sooner or later, whether you want to or not, and to avoid the capital seems wilfully perverse. On a purely practical level, it's a good place to stock up on visas for the rest of Asia, and to arrange transport out of the country - most romantically, on the Trans-Siberian or Trans-Mongolian trains. To take in its superb sights requires a week, by which time you may well be ready to move on to Beijing proper. Beijing is a fun place but, make no mistake, it in no way typifies the rest of the nation.

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