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What's interesting about Shanghai New World?
There are many interesting places in Shanghai New World, such as Shikumen architecture, Binjiang Avenue, human geography and so on.

Shanghai New World is located in the south of Huaihai Middle Road, east to Huangpi South Road, west to Madang Road, north to Taicang Road and south to Zizhong Road, covering an area of 30,000 square meters and a construction area of 60,000 square meters. Xintiandi is a European-style leisure and entertainment collection with Shikumen architecture as the main body, which brings together bars, restaurants and nightclubs of different formats. It is one of the newly built landscapes in Shanghai.

During the day, you can see many Chinese and foreign tourists coming to Xintiandi for sightseeing and taking photos. Near the evening, there is a romantic European style here. Open-air bars and coffee bars are the most popular among young people and foreigners.

And each restaurant with its own characteristics is either brightly lit or creates a romantic artistic conception with weak light. In addition, Xintiandi also has fashion shops and so on. But the catering business is booming. After a tour inside, you can also go to the nearby Taiping Bridge Green Space to enjoy another kind of customs.

Xintiandi, because of its historical and cultural outline, modernization of internal space and international commercial content, makes middle-aged and elderly people feel nostalgic and young people feel fashionable when they enter Xintiandi.

Cultural geography: the planning and layout design concept of historical building characteristics. Before the development of Xintiandi project, it was a Shikumen Lane building with a history of nearly 100 years.

travel notes

1, walking evenly and unevenly is the most labor-saving, which is conducive to maintaining a good attitude; Walking in a hurry is the most exhausting way.

2. Go fast, come back slowly. You can walk faster when you go out in the morning and slower when you come back at night to avoid joint and tendon fatigue.

3. When going up and down the mountain, try to take the stone steps instead of the slopes. This is more in line with mechanical and physiological requirements, safe and labor-saving.

4. Walking on hard ground such as cement, asphalt and slate is more energy-saving and safer than walking on soft ground such as grass, floodplain and wetland.