-
空中看世博 细数6家最优质的上海高空餐厅
Posted on April 27th, 2010 No comments-
旋景餐厅
独家视野:360度的上海老市区全景
位于上海市正中心人民广场的208米高空,远远望去,凌空208米高的餐厅,奇特的造型非常引人注目,宛 如一个巨型宇宙飞船。餐厅每2小时旋转一圈,透过全透明的弧形落地窗可以看见人民广场的全貌:人民公园、南京路步行街、上海美术馆、上海大剧院、苏州河、 黄浦江和外滩的景色。无论你坐在餐厅的哪个位置,都能360度观赏到上海全景,这无疑是每个上海人以及到上海的游客都不容错过的独特体验。
通透敞亮的厨房位于整个餐厅的中央,来自欧洲的名厨们再次精心准备独具特色的欧陆美食,包括:各式开胃前 菜如熏鱼冷盘、风干腌肉配帕尔马干酪、地中海式沙拉,吞拿鱼牛腿肉、还有非常鲜美的野蘑菇汤等。主菜更是种类繁多得令人难以选择,有欧洲风味如烤三文鱼菲 力、菌汁煎牛肉、意大利面等。此外,一系列诱惑力极强的甜点也是餐厅招牌菜系列,如巧克力慕斯、经典提拉米苏、冰绿茶苏夫蕾等。
主厨介绍:厨师长Karl Beter先生具有数十年专业经验,曾先后在17个城市的20多个五星级酒店工作,如北京香格里拉中国大饭店、南非约翰内斯堡卡尔顿威斯丁大酒店、韩国釜 山、威斯丁朝鲜海滩豪华旅馆等。
地址:上海市黄浦区南京西路88号新世界丽生大酒店45楼。
电话:021-6359 9999转4210
人均:400元。
停车位:地下车库若干车位
刷卡:可以。
-
柏悦酒店西餐厅 (Dining Room)
独家视野:天气晴朗的时候能够看到世博园。
位于世界上最高的酒店——柏悦酒店87楼的Dining room是一家充满欧陆风情的西餐厅。同时,作为柏悦酒店的大堂餐厅,Diningroom体现出一种与众不同的居家氛围,以低调奢华的主题给客人亲近之 感。餐厅的整个空间以自然的米色和天然物料为主,无论在感觉或是设计方面均保持低调,却又极其讲究。与餐厅两端相连的分别是一个玻璃屋样的藏酒窖,里面珍 藏了来自世界各地的400多种葡萄佳酿。不过要说Diningroom里最特别的区域,莫过于这个可供10人就餐的“主厨餐桌”,并且配备了整套 Bultthaup厨具装备的开放式厨房,犹如一个开放式家庭厨房兼餐厅,能够让客人充分体验家居式的私人聚会的快乐。
餐厅做的是地道的法国菜,所有菜肴都由酒店的行政副总厨GerhardPassrugger亲自研制,在 保持原汁原味的同时,营造出家庭菜肴的视觉感受。总厨推荐的“家制烟熏三文鱼”选用当天空运而来的挪威上等三文鱼,每一片都切得如同手指般的厚度,口感鲜 美嫩滑,并配有奶香浓郁的土豆色拉,以及总厨秘制的生梨沙司,是一种十分创意的搭配。另一道黑菌汤则是地道的法国菜,待装有甘蓝菜及黑菌的瓷碗上桌后,厨 师现场倒入用深海蜇虾熬制的鲜美汤汁,那是一种家庭式的感觉,却又能感受到大饭店的品质。
主厨介绍:Gerhard Passrugger来自澳大利亚,却是烹饪法国菜的高手。曾先后任职于上海陆唯轩,及美国、澳大利亚多个顶级法国餐厅的主厨。
主厨推荐菜品:家制烟熏三文鱼配土豆色拉,威廉生梨沙司,145元; 甘蓝菜和黑菌汤,深海蛰虾,芝麻叶饺子,150元;烤澳洲羊腰肉,洋葱脆片,奶油蒜汁,小扁豆,300元(另加15%服务费)
地址:上海市浦东新区世纪大道100号环球金融中心87楼。
电话:021-68881234转
人均:600元。
停车位:地下车库若干车位
刷卡:可以。
-
香格里拉酒店翡翠36
独家视野:因为高科技玻璃材质使得邻座的高楼大厦在客人眼前呈现出从脚下到顶部的特殊效 果。
设计师Adam Tihany为翡翠36做了一个阐释中国传统的未来概念的创意。来此用餐的客人都将通过一个高4.3米的由金属和瓷器做成的传统中国碗进入用餐区域,用餐 区的落地窗特别使用了天然材料和高科技材料,使得邻座的高楼大厦在客人眼前呈现出从脚下到顶部的特殊效果。餐厅内部则采用翡翠色的玻璃与紫红色的真皮内饰 相结合出一个中西合璧的室内空间。尤其是夜幕降临后站在无敌的落地窗户前遥望浦江夜色,是完全不同于周围酒店里其他顶级餐厅的视野。
前阵子,餐厅迎来了新人总厨FabriceGiraud,他将翡翠36餐厅的菜单进行了重新打造,呈现法 式经典菜肴的同时加入现代触感。Giraud认为要烹调出最好的菜肴必须使用当地的食材,这样才能够以新的方式来呈现传统法餐。因为,他拒绝试用人工香 料,要求成品菜肴能够充分的体现食材原始的味道,这也就是说烹饪过程中对厨师的烹饪手法的要求异常高,从卖相、食材搭配、口感和营养价值都力求高标准。
主厨介绍:主厨Fabrice Giraud出生于法国南部的拉西约塔,拥有18年法餐烹饪经验,曾在法国和比利时多家星级米其林餐厅工作,其中最著名的是位于布鲁塞尔的le Pain et le Vin米其林一星餐厅。来中国前,在法国埃麦农维尔城堡酒店担任总厨和宴会总监。
主厨推荐菜品:新西兰小龙虾华尔道夫沙拉,178元;盘煎银鳕鱼配吉 普赛汁,188元;黑菌小羊排,388元;柠檬塔,98元(另加15%服务费)。
地址:上海市浦东新区富城路33号香格里拉酒店36楼。
电话:021-68828888
人均:700元。
停车位:酒店地下车库大量停车位
刷卡:可以。
-
金茂君悦大酒店意庐
独家视野:浦东及外滩美景
餐厅开在金茂君悦大酒店的56楼的“食在56”,因而它的景观角度自然是好得无法挑剔。在这里几乎每一张 桌椅都能淋漓尽致地领略到浦江风光,傍晚时分,在此看看夕阳,来分招牌提拉米苏,真是美事一桩。在看看这满满堆成小山状的番茄随意躺在开放式厨房的灶台 上,那可爱的摸样让人忍不住想咬上一口。餐厅的桌椅用的是木质感觉的,非常好的还原了乡村佳肴的感觉。
披萨是意大利菜的招牌,但各家却都有各家的独到指出。意庐的披萨完全是出于砖头砌起来的传统烤炉中,这披 萨的薄脆口感自然是不在话下了。另外,包括“食在56”各个餐厅出品的面包都是出自于这台烤炉。餐厅的各类通心粉和意大利面都是由来自意大利的厨师亲自制 作的,因为传承了意大利最本土的工艺,颜色和样貌却有多种可以选择。除此之外,让人感到心满意足的还有非常棒的精选开胃菜,其中囊获了十余种经典的意大利 小食,包括特制的芝士蛋糕、不同种类的熏肉、沙拉等。
主厨介绍:厨师长Moretti来自风景绮丽的意大利水城威尼斯,也 许是受到其祖母的影响,他最善于烹饪传统家庭式意式菜肴,而让Moretti最引以为豪的意式风味是来自威尼斯、罗马和那不勒斯的菜式。
主厨推荐菜品:开胃冷拼盆,230元(两人份);菠绣多比萨,150 元;西冷牛排配腌制樱桃番茄及陈年黑醋汁,230元;意大利面配三文鱼、鱿鱼、扇贝及樱桃番茄,140元;(另加15%服务费)
地址:上海市浦东新区世纪大道88号金茂君悦大酒店56楼。
电话:021-50491234
人均:500
停车位:酒店地下车库大量停车位
刷卡:可以。
-
JW万豪酒店’s加州扒房
独家视野:人民广场区域全景
这件舒适优雅的西餐厅位于上海JW万豪酒店40层,每位来到这里的客人除了能享受到美味的欧陆菜肴,更能 饱览这座城市最具代表性的市区的景观。餐厅的设计基于太平洋主体,无论是装饰形势,还是色彩及材质都能将客人的感官瞬时带入太平洋海岸的热烈风情之中。餐 厅设计灵感源自加州黄金海岸线上贯穿旧金山与BigSur的1号高速公路。墙面上装饰着浅色的海草与沙滩色的琉璃瓦,淡淡映射出鲜花、红土与日照下的海岸 线宝石般的色调。所有的座椅都是海草般流线型形状,墙面上则饰有雕花镶木板。
扒房的特色菜自然是牛排,厨师会亲自来到您的桌前将最好的法国牛排切下来让您品鉴,此时若是搭配上一杯风 味纯正的加州红酒,想必会格外美味。
主厨介绍:行政总厨邓基利拥有超过20年的国际烹饪经典,曾在许多世 界高级餐厅、五星级酒店和精品私人会所磨练厨艺,足迹遍布意大利、德国、葡萄牙、马尼拉、阿拉伯联合酋长国和印度等国家。
主厨推荐菜品:牛排及龙虾、牛排价格160元到750元不等,基本价 格是200多元(另加15%服务费)
地址:上海市静安区南京西路399号JW万豪酒店40楼。
电话:021-53594969转6455
人均:500元
停车位:酒店地下车库大量停车位
刷卡:可以。
-
祖蓝欧式餐厅
独家视野:浦西繁华一隅,天气好时,可眺望浦东
“祖蓝”一词来源于波斯语的地名,一个生产蓝色宝石现在称之为天青石之地。现在“祖蓝”专形容这种颜色,这种代表性的深蓝色被巧妙地运用并贯穿 于整个餐厅。餐厅的全部落地窗设计让人可以将浦西的美景尽收眼底,天气晴朗的时候,甚至可以远眺浦东景致。餐厅主厨安哲明先生来自意大利,他带来家庭味浓 重的精致地中海菜肴,其风格来自地中海不同的国家:如意大利、法国、西班牙和葡萄牙。餐厅不仅通过菜肴来渲染家庭式分为,包括吃放试用的容器、锅具都摒弃 了酒店厨房使用的容器、锅具都摒弃了不锈钢材质,而改用铜锅、陶瓷罐等。在菜肴出品方面,安哲明先生强调“健康”至上,在菜单上可以发现不少由鱼类搭配时 蔬的菜式,甚至基础调料的保质期都只有三天,超过期限,一概不用。
“祖蓝”的菜式同事强调“分享”的概念,菜单上会注明两人食用或四人食用的分量和不同价格,比如280g的“和风牛排”就足够两个人分享。食材 的真材实料一尝即知,新鲜的深海鱼类,如鳟鱼等都是从挪威进口,牛肉则是澳大利亚进口,“西班牙海鲜煨饭”里的海鲜确保有4种以上。从一些细节上,也足见 主厨的细心与用心,比如餐前面包是由厨师自制的混合了洋葱和土豆的面包,搭配调味过的牛油和顶级橄榄油,充满农家味。
餐厅每个季度都会更换新菜单,百分之八十的菜肴全部换掉,让客人时刻都能有新鲜感,总有那几个菜会让人好奇和期待。餐厅现在推出独特的概念午 餐,是以几个烹饪餐站为主题,内容有每天变换不同花式的多汁肉类和新鲜鱼类刺身,特色现场烤制新鲜自制披萨。
主厨介绍:来自意大利的安哲明先生拥有超过20年的从业经验,曾就职于多家国际酒店,他擅长意大利和地中海 风味烹饪,也精通欧洲、中亚、东南亚加勒比海,拉丁及中东菜肴。
主厨推荐菜品:扒和风牛肉配野蘑菇,快菌和芝麻菜色拉,255元;烤鳟鲷鱼配烤番茄,新鲜香料和茴 香,155元;炒大虾配辣黄油和生菜,245元(另加15%服务费)
地址:上海市长宁路1018号上海龙之梦万丽酒店26楼。
相关文章:
上海世博自助游攻略:美食篇 出游上海 十大不得不吃的美食
上海滩十大最有“资”有味早午餐厅
搜遍大上海最美味的自助餐厅
-
-
Shanghai Nightlife and Drinking Guide: Best Bars & Clubs
Posted on April 18th, 2010 15 comments
Being a busy commercial center during day time, Shanghai transforms into a sparkling seductress after dark. Welcome to Shanghai, Pearl of Orient and Paris of the East .
Shanghai has the reputation as the city that never sleeps, as mainland China’s nightlife capital, Shanghai transforms after dark into a sparkling seductress. This is a party town from way back. Yesterday’s opium joints and gambling dens are today’s private members clubs and Giorgio Armani’s. Shanghai has returned to its rightful place as one of the world’s great sin cities – and one gets the feeling that the party has only just begun. Barflies now have a choice of everything from glamorous Art Deco lounges to the seediest watering hole; live rock and jazz can be heard into the wee hours and the dance club scene now employs DJs , foreign and local, to keeping the younger set raving. Welcome to Shanghai by night.
-
The Bund and the beautiful
After a half-century of neglect, Shanghai’s iconic Bund waterfront is being dug up and transformed into a luxurious after hours destination. Shanghai nightlife mavens can trawl posh restaurants, cocktail lounges, jazz clubs, boutique hotels, day spas and the fashion flagships dotted between old banking headquarters along the main stretch of Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu, as well as in the atmospheric backstreets. More dilapidated heritage gems are set to be gussied up by top global brands in the years to come. The thoroughfare itself is undergoing renovation for the 2010 World Expo that will see traffic diverted underground and new landscaping along the famed riverbank.
It’s a far cry from a decade ago when restaurateur Michelle Garnaut opened Shanghai’s first independent international restaurant in the old Nissin Shipping Building on the waterfront. Back then, the Bund was a long shot – but M on the Bund proved to be a very popular pioneer. This eminently stylish institution is still one of the Bund’s best, serving contemporary European fare such as its signature slow-baked, salt-encased leg of lamb, accompanied by an excellent seasonal wine list. Downstairs, the pink-tinged Glamour Bar has a sophisticated 1930s vibe and excellent straight-up martinis. It also plays host to a diverse collection of artists, panel discussions, musical recitals and an annual writers’ festival (tel: [86-21] 6350-9988, 7/F, 20 Guangdong Lu).
Five years after M, Three on the Bund opened right across the alley (tel: 6323-3355, www.threeonthebund.com, 3 Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu). The Michael Graves-designed beauty is home to some of the city’s top tables, an Armani flagship boutique and the first Evian spa outside France. This building is where the local cognoscenti start or, perhaps end, their Shanghai nightlife carouse, casually tousled yet immaculately chic. On the top floor, New Heights (tel: 6321-0909) serves Western food with a nod to Southeast Asia. It’s the most casual and affordable option and boasts the best view in the house from the wraparound terrace.
On the fourth floor, Jean Georges (tel: 6321-7733) is the three-star Michelin chef’s only signature restaurant outside New York. Inspired by old Shanghai grandeur, the moody lounge is filled with pony-hair club chairs and eel-skin benches leading through to a luxurious burnished copper and cobalt blue dining room. If you’re not dining on an expense account, try the Nougatine experience nightly from 6-11pm. Seated at white-clothed tables in the more relaxed bar area, you can sample a selection of JG favourites starting at just Rmb58. We recommend the black truffle and fontina pizza. This is Shanghai dining at its best.
The Gothic castle at 6 Bund (6 Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu) is also home to several upscale restaurants and a couple of fun lounges. Our pick is Japanese Sun with Aqua on the second floor (tel: 6339-2779), which is remarkably good value for the Bund. Its adjoining Aquarium Bar has a cool underwater vibe, curtained beds – and sharks. The bijou Dolce & Gabbana Martini Bar (tel: 6323-2277) between the men’s and women’s D&G boutiques on the ground floor is a fashionable spot for a restorative espresso or ‘tini between shopping.
Bund 18 (tel: 6323-7066, www.bund18.com, 18 Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu), in the powder-grey neoclassical former Macquarie Bank Tower, features Hong Kong chef To Chi Hoi’s trendy Cantonese cuisine at Tai Wan Lou (tel: 6339-1188) on the fifth floor.One floor up, Mr and Mrs Bund (tel: 6323-9898) is a show-stopping Shanghai restaurant. Taking a break from the molecular cuisine that made his name at Shangri-La’s Jade on 36, French chefs Paul Pairet returns to his roots offering modern French bistro fare – some rustic, some glammed-up – with over 200 dishes meant for sharing. It is open for dinner nightly and continues as a supperclub until 4am five nights a week. Be sure to book a window seat and save room for the excellent desserts.
Bund 18’s top-floor Bar Rouge (tel: 6339-1199) is party – and promiscuity – central. Designed by Imaad Rahmouni, a protege of Starck, the bar features 33 hand-blown Venetian chandeliers, Sino sirens splashed across the walls and a scenic terrace. Between show-off bottle juggling and setting fire to the bar, the bartenders may deign to make you one of their signature ginger melon martinis. Downstairs, Lounge 18 (tel: 6323-8399) attracts a similar crowd.
M1NT Club’s venues in Hong Kong, Cannes and Shanghai are owned by shareholding members and come with an exclusive members-only door policy. The macho Shanghai club sprawls across a 2,000sqm, 24th-floor penthouse, offering 360-degree views from behind the Bund. It also features a 17-metre shark tank, raunchy pop art murals and shareholders-only hot tubs on the rooftop terrace. A good concierge should be able to get you in. (tel: 6391-3191, 24/F, 318 Fuzhou Lu) an
LAN Club (tel: 6323-8029, 102 Guangdong Lu), which occupies an entire four-storey neoclassical mansion near the Westin hotel, is another highly ambitious mega-venue offering Chinese, French and seafood restaurants, multiple lounges and a small nightclub. Down the road, at the glorious intersection of Fuzhou and Jiangxi Lu, Hamilton House (tel: 6321-0586, 137 Fuzhou Lu) is a trendy French brasserie and cocktail lounge in a soaring 1934 Art Deco mansion. Their marmalade-laced Breakfast Martini is a good choice – at any time of the day.
Just past the Bund, in the historic Hongkou district formerly home to the Japanese concession and Jewish Ghetto, Gosney & Kallman’s Chinatown (tel: 6258-2078, 471 Zhapu Lu) brilliantly references Shanghai’s 1930s “Sin City” days. The burlesque club transforms a heritage Shinto shrine with theatre boxes, hard-hitting cocktails and high-kicking show girls. Open Wednesdays to Saturdays, it’s a bit off the beaten track but there is no cover charge and shows feature New York crooner Frank Brae, Shanghai acrobats and a six-strong chorus line. Good fun.
-
Highs and lows in Pudong
Pudong has perked up considerably and some of the Shanghai nightlife throb has moved here. It is steadily becoming a viable option for a good night out. Park Hyatt’s 100 Century Avenue (tel: 6888-1234, 91-93F, Shanghai World Financial Centre, 100 Century Ave, Pudong) is the highest restaurant and bar on the planet, stretching from the 91st to 93rd floors of the 101-storey Shanghai World Financial Centre. Despite its high profile, it’s not the least bit highfaluting. Filling the 91st floor is a very cool and convivial tavern with Western, Chinese and Japanese show kitchens and a 750-label cellar. The à la carte menu here allows you to mix-and-match different cuisines, and highlights top quality produce including seven types of US oysters, Australian Wagyu beef and fresh fish from Tokyo’s Tsujiki Market. The 92nd floor hosts a jazz bar and quieter Oriental lounge with a small dance floor and ballroom dancing four nights a week, while the uppermost level is a private dining space for 100 people adorned in mod-Nordic style and lorded over by mischievous ceramic mooseheads.
In the basement of the Shanghai World Financial Centre (2/B, 100 Century Ave, Pudong), celebrity chef Salvatore Cuomo’s 3,000sqm upmarket food hall incorporates eight different restaurants including an Italian Restaurant and Grill, Japanese Yakiniku, Crystal Jade dim sum counter and a relaxing lounge bar. Gourmet European grocer Bottega is a great place to pick up picnic supplies.
Perched on the 87th floor of the Jin Mao Tower, Cloud 9, the Grand Hyatt’s hotel bar, offers one of the best views in Asia. Make sure you get a table facing west for views of the Bund, Pearl Tower, and the lights of Puxi; windowscapes of its new, taller neighbor, the Shanghai World Financial Center, are to the southeast. Drinks at Cloud 9 aren’t as expensive as you might think, with prices starting at around ¥75 for a small draught Tiger, while cocktails start at about ¥90. There’s a two drink minimum after 8pm and a 15% service charge.
Tucked away by the riverside behind the Oriental Pearl Tower is Salvatore Cuomo’s original Pudong location, The Kitchen (tel: 5054-1265, Unit D, 2967 Lujiazui Xi Lu), another Shanghai dining favorite. The airy Italian is a great place for sundowner drinks looking across the water to Puxi, and its woodfired oven turns out arguably the city’s best pizza.
Jade on 36 is a restaurant that must be experienced to be believed. Perched on the 36th floor of the Pudong Shangri-La Hotel tower, the Jade lounge/restaurant is simply beautiful. Drinks don’t come cheap but neither does real glamour.. Downstairs, the Japanese institution Nadaman serves teppanyaki and yakitori in a Zen-like setting with sleek granite surfaces and big paper lanterns. Yi Café is buffet brilliance, with 10 show kitchens presenting cuisines from China, Japan, India, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Europe and North America. (tel: 6882-8888, Pudong Shangri-La, 33 Fucheng Lu, Pudong).
For laid-back happy hour drinks, head to Blue Frog alongside the enormous Super Brand Mall. This popular Shanghai chain offers 2-for-1 house pours daily from 4-8pm, good burgers, free Wi-Fi and a pleasant terrace surrounded by skyscrapers.
-
Playtime in People’s Park
Constructing an Arabian palace on historic green space in the heart of the city was a questionable move by Shanghai’s town planners – but the party people aren’t complaining. Deep in People’s Park, on the edge of a still lake, candlelit Barbarossa (tel: 6318-0220, 231 Nanjing Lu) glimmers like a mirage. Step inside to find three storeys of maharajah chic filled with North African antiques and the European trip-hop beats. Food and service can be lacklustre but you won’t much care after a cappuccino-flavoured sheesha pipe on the terracotta rooftop.
The same group has also opened a sprawling club next door to the Four Seasons. Sin (tel: 6267 7779, 23/F, 211 Shimen Yi Lu) lives up to its name with a suitably decadent design incorporating a dance floor, hot pink cushiony nooks and city views from the 23rd floor.
On the rooftop of the old British Racing Club, now the Shanghai Art Museum, Kathleen’s 5 (tel: 6327-2221, 5/F, Shanghai Art Museum, 325 Nanjing Xi Lu) is an elegant restaurant in a glassed-encased terrace beneath the original clock tower. The food plays second fiddle to the ambience. The Backroom Bar is a charming place for cocktails and the occasional tango milonga.
Also on People’s Square, JW Marriott’s 40th-floor Champagne Bar (tel: 5359-4969, 399 Nanjing Xi Lu) is a top spot to kick back in style and drink in the vertiginous views of the Square (which is actually round) and the city radiating beyond. It’s a good spot to contemplate your Shanghai nightlife options.

Great drinks, design, décor and dining - T8 in the ultra-hip shopping and dining district of Xintiandi is a don't miss.
-
Shikumen chic – Xintiandi bars and clubs
Site of the Communist Party’s first clandestine meeting in 1921, the 19th century shikumen neighbourhood of Xintiandi (Lane 181, Taicang Lu) is now a hub for all manner of glamorous delights. If you have the cash, you can’t really go wrong with the venues here – there are more Shanghai dining options here than you can shake a stick at – but some are more memorable than others.
T8 Restaurant & Bar (tel: 6355-8999, No 8, North Block Xintiandi, www.t8shanghai.com) serves global cuisine in a lacquered Zen setting, with an impressive list of boutique wines. If you’re craving Chinese, Xintiandi has two worth trying: Crystal Jade (tel: 6385-8752) and Din Tai Fung (tel: 6385-8378). Casual American bistro KABB has a faithful following and great hangover brunches on weekends.
Fans of Liuligongfang will love Taiwanese owner Yang Hui Shan’s showcase restaurant TMSK (tel: 6326-2227, www.tmsk.com, Unit 2, House 11, North Block).
Perch on a crystal stool at the bar or head up the carved staircase to a sumptuous dining room complete with musicians playing traditional Chinese instruments on a small stage.
The dark, sultry DR Bar (tel: 6326 8008, House 15, North Block) next door is owned by the architects of the Xintiandi development, Ben Wood and Carlos Zapata.
Their minimalist venue showcases design materials sourced in China, from the ink stone slabs to the trio of vodka shooters served in a Chinese “cricket jar”.

Cotton's is popular with many expats for its friendly vibe and quintessential Shanghai setting in a romantic French Concession mansion.
-
To the manor born in the former French Concession
Shanghai bars and restaurants have made full use of the city’s rich architectural heritage and many of the city’s finest old villas are now atmospheric tippling grounds.
Private members club KEE Shanghai (tel: 3395-0888, 3/F, 796 Huaihai Lu) occupies the upper floors of twin 1920s French Concession villas just off Huaihai Lu. The club is part of Richemont Group’s luxury headquarters, and sits above flagship ‘homes’ of Alfred Dunhill and Vacheron Constantin. Its classic European restaurant and luxe scarlet lounge adorned with art and antiques, lead out to a colonnaded balcony overlooking a quiet garden. A good concierge should be able to get you in to this posh Shanghai dining venue.
Sasha’s (tel: 6474-66289, Dongping Lu) has been the long-time resident of a big red villa formerly home to the infamous Soong family. The bar offers a relaxed, colonial vibe, pool table, reasonable happy hours and an expansive courtyard with comfy wicker chairs. Steakhouse, Prime, sits on the second floor. Sharing the garden, Mexican cantina Zapata’s (tel: 6474-6166, 5 Hengshan Lu) is still the place to be on Wednesdays – free margaritas for the girls, ’80s house music and dancing on the bartop assured.
Cocktail gem Constellation II (tel: 5465 5993, 1-2/F, 33 Yongjia Lu) is a more refined affair. Taking its interior cues from the roaring 1930s its two floors joined by a spiral staircase are filled with quiet nooks and leather armchairs bathed in the glow of antique lampshades. Immaculate cocktails are shaken by Japanese-trained barman/owner, Kin. Down the road in a two-storey heritage villa on quiet Anting Lu, Cotton’s exudes warmth, with four open fireplaces, a large garden terrace and genuinely friendly vibe (tel: 6433-7995, 132 Anting Lu).
Another alfresco Shanghai dining option is A Future Perfect in the popular B&B, Old House (tel: 6248-8020, No 16, Lane 351 Huashan Lu). A wholesome, organic approach is evident in the recycled decor and a healthy menu of steaks, salads and smoothies. Best of all is the spacious walled garden under a leafy canopy where Panton-inspired cantilevered chairs and a futuristic outdoor bar are strikingly juxtaposed against the original 1930s facade.
South Beauty 881 (tel: 6247-6682; 881 Yan’an Zhong Lu) combines artfully presented Sichuan and Cantonese dishes and cutting-edge designs by Japanese architects SuperPotato. But the real gem is the property’s original 1930s mansion, home to 19 dramatically decorated private dining rooms around a lipstick-red bar. Rooms seat from two to fifty people and there’s a lovely rooftop terrace.
Another excellent option with an Asean kick is Lost Heaven (tel: 6433-5126, 38 Gaoyou Lu). Tracing the folk cuisines of the Dai, Bai and Miao ethnic hill tribes through China’s Yunnan province and into Burma and Laos, the richly spiced curries are served in a suitably exotic villa setting.
Casa 13 (tel: 5238-2782, Rm 13, 1100 Huashan Lu) is a dash of Mediterranean in the courtyard of a heritage Spanish villa. This warm, romantic venue with chandeliers strung from high ceilings serves hearty seafood, roasted meats, risottos and pasta, accompanied by an impressive wine list. The Casa’s owner Eduardo Vargas, is a Shanghai dining powerhouse – among his other popular Shanghai restaurants are Vargas Grill (tel: 6437-0136, 3/F, 18 Dongping Lu), Bistro Burger (tel: 6170-1315, 1/F, Mansion, 291 Fumin Lu) and Osteria (tel: 6256-8998, 226 Jinxian Lu), where the excellent Rmb198 Italian prix fixe menu is complemented by a well-priced wine list.
Catalan chef Willy Trullàs Moreno helms delightful villa restaurant, El Willy (tel: 5404-5757, 1/F, Diage, 20 Donghu Lu). Innovative dishes on the menu here include scallop with ceviche, avocado and crispy shallots, and chocolate coulant with green tea ice cream and tomato cardamom jam. A tucked-away garden hosts alfresco seating and occasional organic farmers markets.
Designer Wang Xingzheng has a passion for Chinese culture and his three bars should not be missed. Yongfoo Elite (tel: 5466-2727, www.yongfooelite.com, 200 Yongfu Lu) is a rarefied members club in the old British consulate evoking the Shanghai of popular imagination rendered in mahogany, old leather, crystal chandeliers and Chinese lanterns. The Shanghainese cuisine is nothing to write home about, but an evening spent draped across a canopy bed in the garden sipping gin-and-tonic and listening to Beijing opera in the background certainly is. The Door, way out in Hongqiao (tel: 6295-3737, 4/F, 1468 Hongqiao Lu), and Xian Qiang Fang (tel: 6351-5757, 5/F, 600 Jiujiang Lu), located in an old theatre near People’s Square, are similarly decadent.

Big Bamboo is Shanghai's best sports bar. Malone's, which attracts a similar if slightly older clientele, is just around the corner.
-
A walk on the wild side – Julu Lu and Tongren Lu
Time to dive into the seed or, at any rate, skirt past it. That’s right. The cheap lipstick heart of Shanghai nightlife, Julu Lu caters to all tastes. Near the junction of Changshu Lu is a row of down-at-heel girlie bars with names like Goodfellas and Badlands and propositions by the yard. However, the Fumin Lu end is infinitely classier. For its jaw-dropping industrial-chic interior and nouvelle Japanese cuisine, book one of the mezzanine tables at Shintori Null II (tel: 5404 5252, 803 Julu Lu). The same group also owns bar/restaurant People 7 (tel: 5404-0707) next door, known for its fun password-protected entrance and trick toilets.
Nearby, an old electronics factory retains its buzz as the well-heeled watering hole Manifesto (tel: 6289-9108, 748 Julu Lu). Be sure to try one of their creative cocktails like the Belgian white chocolate martini. The downstairs restaurant, Mesa, has a good modern Australian menu and fabulous weekend brunches.
For booze, babes and beats, the seedy masses head to Tongren Lu bar street. The most sophisticated of the bunch, Blue Frog (tel: 6247-0320, 86 Tongren Lu) wins points for its slick but super-casual ambience, daily happy hours (4-8pm) and famous 100 shooters. Within stumbling distance, Malone’s (tel: 6247-2400, 255 Tongren Lu) is a beefy American bar popular with the beer-swilling masses for its super burgers, sports and Filipino house band. The top floor of this massive bar has been refitted as a slightly more sophisticated chill-out zone, complete with a country-western crooner. Big Bamboo (tel: 6256-2265, 132 Nanyang Lu) and The Spot (tel: 6247-3579, 331 Tongren Lu) kick on until late with a variety of sports on big screens, bar sports and beer swilling.
Also on Tongren Lu, City Diner (6289-3699, 2/F, 146 Tongren Lu) is open 24 hours. Their hearty portions of all-American comfort food go down a treat after a long night of drinking.

Babyface: Probably the best nightspot to hit up for some Chinese-style clubbing complete with loud thumping music and patrons playing table-side dice games.
-
Shanghai clubbing – dance until dawn
Packed to the gills and reeking of parfum and pretension, the enormously popular Baby Face (tel: 6375-6667, Unit 101, 138 Huaihai Zhong Lu) consists of two separate dance areas, a central bar that you’ll be lucky to get to and exclusive mezzanine lounges requiring a Rmb2,500-Rmb3,500 minimum order. There’s a cover charge on weekends, brutish bouncers manning the door and floor, and a largely local crowd.
In Fuxing Park (2 Gaolan Lu), Muse at Park 97 (tel: 5383-2328) and club Guandii (tel: 3308-0725) attract a glittery Chinese crowd – don’t forget your dice and aviator specs. Velvet Lounge (tel: 5403-2976, Bldg 3-4, 913 Julu Lu) is a favourite late-night lounge for expats and locals alike with curtained enclaves, a DJ, dance floor and great thin-crust gourmet pizzas.
MAO Livehouse Shanghai (tel: 138160-95660, 46 Yueyang Lu, www.maoshanghai.com) stands for Music Art Oasis, and features a recycled chrome and concrete interior, all-natural cocktails and a grassy backyard chill-out zone. At the end of the night head to the tiny Dragon Club (tel: 5404-4592, 156 Fengyang Lu), which kicks on until 7am at weekends.
-
Mellow mood – all that jazz
Shanghai and jazz are synonymous and two of the city’s best-loved live jazz clubs are within a stone’s throw of each other on Fuxing Lu. The plush JZ Club (tel: 6431-0269, 46 Fuxing Xi Lu) hosts a varied weekly line-up of vocal jazz, Big Band, Latin and Shanghai jazz, headlined by popular Shanghai-based musicians, such as flamboyant Chinese vocalist Coco Zhao and guitarist Lawrence Ku, while the long-running Cotton Club (tel: 6437-71108, Fuxing Xi Lu) is a much rawer venue with a dark, smoky interior and righteous blues.
In a heritage villa behind the Bund, House of Blues & Jazz (tel: 6323-2779, 60 Fuzhou Lu) revives the golden Shanghai Jazz Age, complete with wood-panelled walls, art deco furnishings, fat cigars and stiff G&Ts. The musical roster brings top jazz and blues bands from the international circuit for three-month stints, along with ‘mellow Monday’ gigs by local performers, and jam sessions on Sundays.
Shanghai nightlife waits for nobody, so strap on your beer goggles and enjoy the ride.
-
What to See & Do in Shanghai
Top Ten Shanghai Must-See Attractions
Visitor’s Guide to The Bund: Shanghai’s Newly Opened Waterfront Landmark
Modern Architectural Wonders of Shanghai
Exploring the Water Villages – Excursions from Shanghai
-
Where to Dine in Shanghai
Taste of Shanghai – A Guide to Shanghai’s Best Food
- Where to Shop in Shanghai
Shop till you drop – Shanghai Shopping Guide
-
Where to Stay in Shanghai
-
-
Tibetan Mastiff: New Must-Have Luxury for China’s Wealthy Elite
Posted on April 17th, 2010 No commentsChina’s latest must-have luxury for the ultra-rich, to go with mansions and sports cars, is a large, slobbery dog with massive amounts of hair best known for herding sheep and guarding Buddhist monasteries in Tibet. Tibetan Mastiffs (also known as Do-khyi) are large and fierce, reaching a height of up to 31 inches (80cm) and a weight of 176 lbs (80kg).

From the frozen steppes and remote monasteries of Tibet to the gated communities of China's urban rich, this guardian dog has come a long way.
Once condemned and banned as a bourgeois folly, pet ownership is booming in China, and the Tibetan mastiff is the dog of the moment for those who want to spread their wealth beyond stocks and real estate.
You Wenfa, owner of a mastiff breeding farm on the outskirts of Beijing, saw potential profits from the enormous hounds and purchased his first dog in the early 1990s.
You currently has over 40 dogs and goes back to Tibet every year to seek prospective additions to his stock.
He also provides breeding services and charges up to 100,000 yuan ($14,650) for a session with one of his pedigrees.
“This is like a car. You drive a German Mercedes or BMW and I drive a Chinese Xiali or mini van. Everybody has their own choices,” said You.
“These dogs at the moment are a kind of choice for status and wealth,” said You, whose pure breed mastiffs can fetch up to 300,000 yuan each.

Tibetan mastiff puppies for sale sit on a car covered by a red blanket during annual China Tibetan Mastiff Expo in Beijing
“I can understand racehorses and diamonds, but I don’t understand why someone would want to pay half a million dollars for a dog, In the US, $5,000 is the upper limit for a show quality puppy.” said Martha Feltenstein, president of the American Tibetan Mastiff Association. “They have a relatively short life expectancy and are not especially rare, so it’s quite puzzling why they are fetching such a high price in China.”
In the U.S., Tibetan mastiff pups can be bought for as little as several hundred dollars, Feltenstein said.

A black Tibetan Mastiff called Yangtze River Number Two is believed to have broken the world record as the most expensive dog, having been sold to a Chinese woman for a reported $582,000 in 2009.
-
The most expensive dog cost $582,000
Tibetan mastiffs hit the headlines last year when a young woman named as Ms Wang in China’s western Shaanxi province paid 4 million yuan ($582,000) for a mastiff cumbersomely named Yangtze River Number Two.
In keeping with its status the dog — 18 months old and 80cm high — arrived at its new owner’s home in stupendous style. According to local reports, a motorcade of 30 black Mercedes-Benz and other luxury cars cruised to the airport in Xi’an, the capital of Shaanxi province, to take delivery of Yangtze, and a throng gathered to fête the arrival of the city’s new resident after Ms Wang returned from buying it in Yushu county, Qinghai province in north-west China, home to many ethnic Tibetans and the epicenter of the 7.1-magnitude earthquake this Wednesday (April 14, 2010).
- Tibetan Mastiff “Red Lion” worth $1.47 million
Yangtze however lost its top-dog status in April this year as the award-winning mastiff Red Lion was snapped up for $1.47 million (10 million yuan) after it won the grand championship at a mastiff exhibition held in Chengdu.
“I bought it at 480,000 yuan in 2009 when it was half a year old. My dog is a pure Tibetan mastiff, with its family tree confirmed by the authorities. Strong and majestic, it was spotlit among China’s 200 top mastiffs taking part in the preliminary contest,” said He Guangyin, the dog’s owner who lives in Lhasa.
“Red lion,” male, eats one kg of fresh beef and other quality food every day as it is in the growth period, He noted.
He said that 200,000 yuan is charged now for a successful breeding with his mastiff.

Among the must-haves for rich men in northeast China, the Xinhua News Agency recently said, was a young beautiful wife, a Lamborghini and a Tibetan mastiff, "the bigger and more ferocious the better."
- New status symbol
After splurging on real estate in Australia, American thoroughbreds and European designer fashions, China’s rich see the Tibetan mastiffs as a new status symbol. China is now home to an estimated 825,000 millionaires, its most in modern history, and its luxury goods market is one of the fastest growing in the world. Among the must-haves for rich men in northeast China, the official Xinhua News Agency recently said was a young beautiful wife, a Lamborghini and a Tibetan mastiff, “the bigger and more ferocious the better.”
“You could call it a local luxury brand,” said Rupert Hoogewerf, a Shanghai-based tax specialist who who compiles a popular annual list of China’s richest people. “Luxury brands are growing at phenomenal rates in China and owning a Tibetan mastiff is another channel for increasing your credibility and showing off your rich status.”
The mastiffs, themselves, look like money, resembling a lion that is a traditional symbol of good fortune.
“We want a breed of dog that is home grown, and this guardian dog is perfect because it is also a symbol of good luck for Chinese people throughout history,” said Wu Yunliang, the owner of “Warren Buffett” and nearly 20 other mastiffs. He keeps them in the northern city of Taiyuan where he owns a nursing home.

Hundreds of the hairy dogs were on hand, and owners and handlers marched the most expensive ones down catwalks during the annual China Tibetan Mastiff Expo in Beijing as though they were fashion models. Some carried the names of wealthy Americans like "Warren Buffett," while others were called "Obama" and "Son of Bush".
- Breeder standards
Potential profits from mastiff breeding are what drew Sui Huizheng, the businessman-breeder, who said he isn’t a dog lover. “I don’t touch or play with them much,” Sui said. He leaves the brushing and fluffing of his dogs to nearly a dozen handlers.
Passers-by were told only to admire the dogs from afar and not get near them because they’re hostile to strangers — all the better for protecting flocks and herders on the isolated Tibetan plateau, where they originated.
Retired track coach Ma Junren became fascinated with the mastiffs when he was training female distance runners on the Tibetan plateau in the late 1980s. Ma claimed the high-altitude training and concoctions of turtle blood and caterpillar fungus he fed the runners helped them set world records. But some of his athletes were later caught using banned performance-boosting substances. Ma retired, denying wrongdoing.
At the annual China Tibetan Mastiff Expo, he exhorted breeders to raise their standards so that China can gain entry to the World Canine Organization (Fédération Cynologique Internationale), an international federation of kennel clubs. The organization has so far kept China out over lax controls on vaccinations, several breeders said.
“I hope all our Tibetan mastiff lovers are honest. We don’t want to see thieves, criminals or cheaters around us,” Ma said.
藏獒成为中国暴富一族新宠
对中国的暴富一族来说,除了豪宅和跑车,最新的奢侈品就是以在西藏牧羊而闻名的毛茸茸、流着口水的大狗藏獒。
曾经被视为资产 阶级产物而一度遭禁的宠物饲养,如今在中国如火如荼。对那些想要在股票和房地产之外挥洒财富的人来说,藏獒正红极一时。
“我过去投资德国牧羊犬,但当前藏獒是热门”,生意人隋慧征(音)拥有约20只狗,他参加了上周末举行的第六届中国年度藏獒展览会。
数百只毛茸茸的大狗到场,狗主人和驯狗师让最昂贵的那些在秀场上亮相,仿佛它们是时装模特。一些狗起了“巴菲特”这样的美国富人的名字,其他的 还有叫“上帝”、“王子”的。他们希望得到的大奖是,饲养者愿意支付几万美元和他们的藏獒配种。隋花了4.3万美元弄到一个大展示台和一个贴满海报的摊位 来炫耀他的狗。
这种狂热似乎与其他地方的销售模式和常规相违背,尤其是对于一种以凶猛而著称的普通狗来说。“我能理解赛马和钻石,但没法理解为什么有些人想为 一只狗花上50万美元”,美国藏獒协会主席玛莎•费尔滕斯坦说,“它们相对而言寿命不长,而且并非特别稀有。所以,它们能在中国被炒到这么高的价格,令人 费解。”费尔滕斯坦说,在美国,区区几百美元就能买到藏獒。而中国的饲养者称,藏獒卖到几万美元,甚至超过10万美元。
继在澳大利亚房地产、美国顶级汽车和欧洲设计师的时装上大肆挥霍之后,中国的富人们又把藏獒当成了一个新的身份象征。中国如今拥有82.5万百 万富翁———是现代史上最多的,它的奢侈品市场是全世界增长最快之一。中国官方媒体最近报道,在中国东北富人的“必备”品中包括娇妻、兰博基尼和藏獒, “越大越好,越凶猛越好。”
“你可以称之为区域奢侈品牌”,中国富人排行榜的制造者胡润称,“奢侈品牌在中国正以惊人的速度增长,拥有一只藏獒是增强信誉和炫富的另一个渠 道。
-
女子400万买藏獒取名长江2号 30辆奔驰列队迎接
400万元对许多人来说,绝对是一个天文数字。可西安王女士,据说用400万元从青海玉树藏族自治州购买了一只藏獒。更让人惊叹的是,买主不仅空运藏獒到西 安,还吸引朋友动用30辆奔驰在机场迎接它。
王女士说,“长江二号”是后来才取的名,它原本有个好听的名字,叫“白根”,今年1岁半,是她和朋友花了很长时 间才物色到的一只原生态藏獒,是名獒“苏牧王”的后代。“金子有价獒无价”,王女士说,这次去玉树,原本是为自己的一只藏獒配种的,由于太喜欢“白根” 了,才临时决定花400万元买下了“白根”。说起如此庞大的迎接队伍,王女士说,这些迎接的朋友不少都是藏獒爱好者,大家都是自发组织起来特意迎接的。
而今年4月一条名叫“红狮”的藏獒让“长江二号”黯然失色, “红狮”在一次藏獒“选美”比赛中获得冠军,它目前的身价至少在1,000万元以上。
-
拉萨藏獒“红狮”勇夺 “总冠 军”、“最佳狮头獒” 双冠
2010年4月3日位于拉萨市堆龙 德庆县的藏獒养殖基地的藏獒“红狮”在成都勇夺双冠。与其主人何银平说,“红狮”夺得冠军后身价猛增,它目前的身价至少在1000万以上。 “由于体型壮硕,且处于生长期,‘红狮’每天要吃两斤的鲜牛肉,还要吃 上等饲料等食物。” 何光银说,“红狮”是一只公犬,在动物界公犬的价值比母犬更高。按照当前的市场来看,“红狮”配种成功一次可值近20万元。
“红狮”来自成都一家精品藏 獒养殖基地,2009年,何光银以48万的身价 把这头半岁的小獒带回拉萨。由于它的头看起来很像狮子头, 主人起了个“红狮”这个名字。
-
-
上海世博自助游攻略:美食篇
Posted on April 15th, 2010 1 comment上海是个海纳百川的城市,几乎所有的中国菜系都汇聚在这里,世界各地的佳肴也都能在上海觅到踪迹,融会中西精华而又别具韵味的本帮菜更是不可不尝。游遍天下还要吃遍天下,对老饕们来说,汇聚世界美食的世博会是大饱口福的好时机。吃什么,怎么吃?小编为你勾画世博美食地图。
位于法国馆顶楼的第六感餐厅是世博园区人气最高的餐厅之一。除了米其林三星餐厅主厨波塞尔兄弟的金字招牌,还因为就餐后可以由此直入法国馆。第六感餐厅人均近400元的消费不低,在波塞尔兄弟全球各地的餐厅中却属最物美价廉。鹅肝饺黑松露汤、龙虾蟹肉色拉、抹茶焦糖布丁、烤芒果配香草冰激凌、焦糖柠檬醋烤海鲈鱼都让人流连忘返。吃完饭后,顺便到顶层空中花园转一转,能欣赏满眼绿色。人多时,第六感餐厅需要排1个小时的长队,如果没有耐心,不妨转到法国馆一楼礼品店,这里有第六感咖啡店,不尝大餐,那就试试米其林三星主厨的简食和甜点,布朗宁蛋糕尤受欢迎。与第六感餐厅旗鼓相当的博古斯学院餐厅,位于最佳城市实践区法国罗阿大区展馆四楼,它同样属于米其林三星餐厅,还是学院餐厅,半开放厨房内法国大厨带着中国学员忙碌,价格略低,排队时间较短,品质不打折。
喜好海鲜的游客们不妨第一时间奔向挪威馆餐厅,它位于挪威国家馆出口处,呈半开放状态。这家餐厅在挪威有8家分店,据说世博会期间,8位主厨会轮流来上海驻场。最重要的是,所有海鲜当天从挪威空运而来,各色花式用三文鱼、鳕鱼做成的菜肴叫人大呼过瘾,200元到400元出头的价格也变得可以接受了。爱吃肉的游客,适合去德国馆餐厅大嚼纯正的德意志香肠、猪手,网上一张人们手持人民币抢购的照片,令德国馆餐厅迅速挤进热门行列。
比起欧陆佳肴,亚洲菜离我们更近,似乎少了点神秘感,如何找到不一样的味道?浦西园区日本产业馆“紫”餐厅以稀有取胜,厨师们来自京都顶级料理店“菊乃寿”“Tan熊北店”和“鱼三楼”。菜单只有一种——顶级怀石料理。餐厅共设5个包间,客人用餐时,可以尽赏日本庭院之美。每隔半小时会有烟雾从厅中松树升起。所有细节精心设计,连毛巾都是特别定制,华丽的龟甲万筷子成了送客礼。虽然价格不菲,但如果你是狂热的怀石料理爱好者,可以考虑尝尝鲜,省去飞日本的麻烦。
有贵的,就有便宜的,日本产业馆外小亭子前大排长队,著名的道顿堀章鱼烧35元8粒,洒上“会跳舞”的柴鱼片、青苔粉,特别吸引年轻人。新加坡馆与澳大利亚馆间的小亭子“新加坡美味”,也在年轻人中广为流传,各式东南亚风味简餐,纯正度不亚于国家馆餐厅水准。
如果没有时间待在餐厅里细细品味,千万别错过招牌美食:爱尔兰原味啤、红啤,波兰狮子头、荷兰威化饼、秘鲁皮斯科酒、哈酷娜玛塔塔非洲餐厅鸵鸟牛肉卷、比利时薯条、保加利亚玫瑰香型酸奶冰激凌、西班牙生火腿……这份长长的名单由老饕们网络品评而出,出产餐厅大多位于国家馆内或附近,点上它们,打包边走边吃,不失为节约时间看展馆又饱尝美味的妙招。
想尝尝中国各地美食,世博轴西侧的餐饮中心是园区内最大的餐饮点,这里的中华美食街汇聚了天津狗不理包子,北京烤鸭,山西刀削面,贵州酸汤面……消费方式仿效“大食代”,花100元充卡,神州好味尽入腹中。
-
上海特色菜介绍
南翔小笼馒头 南翔小笼包为上海郊区南翔镇的传统名点,素负盛名。因其形态小巧,皮薄呈半透明状,以特制的小竹笼蒸熟,故称“小笼包”。市内也有两家制作小笼包著名的店家。一家是豫园商城内的南翔馒头店,另一家是西藏路延安路口的古猗园点心店。
高桥松饼 用精白粉、熟猪油、绵白糖、赤豆、桂花为原料,精细加工而成,滋味甜肥,松酥爽口,为高桥四大名点(松饼,松糕、薄脆、一捏酥)之一。淮海中路瑞金路口的高桥食品厂门市部专营。
素菜包子 素菜包子是豫园附近“春风松月楼”的特色点心。其特点是包子表面洁白,馅心绿中生翠,采用青菜,面筋,香菇,冬笋,香豆腐干等原料,配以香油,糖等调味,故一开竹笼,满室生香,其色,形,味三者俱佳。
小绍兴鸡粥 小绍兴鸡粥店,因操作师傅是绍兴人而得名。鸡粥的特色是用鸡汁原汤烧煮的糯米白粥,鸡肉皮脆骨香,肉呈白色,鲜嫩可口,食之无穷。小绍兴鸡粥店位于云南南路,已久负盛名。
白斩鸡 “说起白斩鸡,要数小绍兴”,这已成为了许多上海人的口头禅。由于“小绍兴”精选上海浦东一带所产著名的“三黄鸡”,质量好、味道鲜美,而赢得了广大顾客的喜爱。“小绍兴”也成了上海久负盛名的名店。
擂沙团 是设在襄阳南路的“乔家栅点心店”经营的名点之一。约有50多年历史,把包有鲜肉,豆沙,芝麻等各种馅心的糯米汤团煮熟后沥干,滚上一层特制的赤豆粉,入口香糯,具有浓郁的赤豆香味,还有爽口和携带方便等特点。
排骨年糕 排骨香酥鲜嫩,年糕香糯适口,汁浓色艳,为上海人喜食的小吃品种。最闻名的店有四川中路福州路口的“小常州”和“鲜得来”点心分店的排骨年糕。西藏南路金陵路口光明中学北侧的“鲜得来”是生意不错的一家。
鸡鸭血汤 鸡鸭血汤是城隍庙大门边“松盛点心店”供应的传统小吃,其特点是汤清见底,汤里的血块什件,清爽味美,主要是选料精细,烧煮独特之故。
蟹壳黄 用油酥加酵面作坯,做成扁圆形小饼,面上粘着一层芝麻。贴在烘炉壁上烘熟,形圆,色黄似蟹壳。馅有葱油、鲜肉、白糖、豆沙等。石门一路威海路口吴苑饼家,是供应蟹壳黄的名店。
开洋葱油面 开洋葱油面是豫园附近“湖心点心店”的特色面点,素有“葱油香飘九曲桥”之说,其特色是开洋葱油,拌以面条,入口润滑爽口又鲜又香。它是用苏北家乡熬出的深红带黄的葱油,加上特制的开洋,故闻之开胃,食之浓香,是四季皆宜的小吃。
八宝辣酱 是著名的上海特色菜之一。以八种禽、肉、菜果为主要原料,通过拌、炒烹饪而成。味道香中带辣,故名“八宝辣酱”。由于菜的原料多样,因此颜色丰富,润泽光亮,鲜香微辣,咸甜适中。
生煎馒头 曾闻名于旧上海的丰裕生煎和油豆腐粉丝汤,至今仍是丰裕饮食店的特色招牌。因为价格便宜,而且量也多。既能当主食,又能当点心。像这类中式快餐店在上海颇受欢迎。
桂花甜酒酿 用糯米加甜酒药焐发而成的桂花甜酒酿,是上海人很喜欢吃的风味小吃。甜甜的,还有一股奇特的清香,沁人心肺
青团 青团色泽碧绿光亮,是一种加入草汁的米粉团子。口感清淡,略带香味。每到清明,上海人就有吃青团的习俗。
包脚布 所谓“包脚布”,就是鸡蛋饼夹油条,里面再加甜蜜酱抑或辣椒酱、适量的榨菜、香菜,包起来象旧时的铅笔盒一样,是上海街头的经典小吃。
鲜肉锅贴 锅贴被人戏称是生煎的兄弟,是一种煎烙的馅类小食品,制作精巧,味道精美,多以猪肉馅为常品,根据季节配以不同鲜蔬菜。包制时一般是馅面各半,呈月芽形。锅贴底面呈深黄色,酥脆,面皮软韧,馅味香美。上海吃锅贴的地方很多,如盛记一品、“四海游龙”锅贴专卖店等。
枫泾丁蹄 上海市郊金山县出产的枫泾丁蹄已有一百多年的历史。它采用黑皮纯种“枫泾猪”的蹄子精制而成,这种黑皮猪骨细皮薄,肥瘦适中。丁蹄煮熟后,外形完整无缺,色泽红亮,肉嫩质细。热吃酥而不烂,汤质浓而不腻;冷吃喷香可口,另有一番风味。
金泽状元糕 产于上海青浦。采用优质纯粳米,用石舂碓成粉,配以白糖,经蒸、切、焙、烘等工艺制成。如和以适量松子粉则成松子状元糕;和以椒盐则成椒盐状元糕,宜不喜甜令及患胃病者食用。成品片薄,色泽金黄,味美气香,甘甜松脆,入口即溶,内含蛋白质、脂肪、维生素、及多种微量元素,具有助消化、生津健脾之效。
响油鳝糊 这到菜以新鲜鳝鱼作为原料,把当天宰杀的鳝鱼切成断儿后,放入佐料,爆炒。颜色偏深红,油润而不腻,新鲜可口。
-
上海美食街推荐
上海城隍庙一条街 与豫园毗邻,又称老城隍庙,位于方浜中路,东至安仁街,北通福佑路,西至旧校场路。经营各种上海风味小吃:绿波廊的特色点心、松月楼的素菜包、桂花厅的鸽蛋圆子、松云楼的八宝饭、南翔小笼、宁波汤团和酒酿圆子等,可称得上是小吃王国了。
交通:乘坐11、66、126、926路公交均可到达。
云南南路美食街 地处市中心,北起延安东路,南至金陵东路,是上海人下馆子去的最多的地方。曾有人戏言:“步入云南路,口福,口福,淌下口水无数”。这里有长安饺子楼、金陵酒家、三和楼菜馆、老正兴菜馆等,可以品尝到美味的北京烤鸭、小金陵盐水鸭、“鲜得来”排骨年糕、“小绍兴”的白斩鸡、 “南翔”的小笼包、天津狗不理包子、新梅居的热气羊肉、“老四川”火锅、“新疆烤羊肉”等。
交通:公交220、127、503、126路均可到达。
黄河路美食街 从南京路拐进,你就已经进入了一条生猛实惠的餐饮超市。这里体现的是上海弄堂美食的一大特色,这里大多为上海菜、海鲜楼,偶尔也可见到水煮鱼、串烧之类的字眼。
交通:地铁1、 2号线、136路、210路均可达到。
乍浦路美食街 位于苏州河北,紧邻市级商业街四川北路。这里以新潮的餐馆酒楼为主,以粤式菜肴和生猛海鲜为特色,是沪上中产阶层宴请、聚会的首选。
交通:公交13、19、63、100路等都可到达。
七宝老街 位于新街青年路旁,这里的美食让人眼花缭乱:各种卤味、各色方糕、臭豆腐、汤圆、白切羊肉、七宝糟肉、拆蹄等。
交通:在上海体育馆的旅游集散中心有专车前往,也可以在乘坐公交91、92路。
吴江路小吃街 位于上海电视台(南京西路)旁边的一条小路上,内有、烤鱼、铁板烧、“小扬生煎”、重庆烧鸡公、牛肉饼、特色的章鱼小丸子、碳烤鸡翅、凉皮、臭豆腐、肉夹膜等。
交通:有37路、地铁2号线等交通可以到达。
仙霞路美食街 作为一条老牌而口碑悠久的美食街,仙霞路的魅力依然为众多食客津津乐道。台菜、日本料理、韩国料理、东南亚风味,仙霞路上不单种类齐全,有些品牌连锁菜馆最初就是在仙霞路创的业。仙霞路上还有着年轻人和恋人们喜欢的情调,茶坊、酒吧,玩具吧,那里有情调,价格也可以接受。
交通:公交71、 121、54、88、127等可以到达。
-
上海本帮菜介绍
上海菜分为“本帮菜” 和“海派菜”。清末民初,16中地方风味并存上海,号称16帮,上海菜是本地菜,故称本帮,本帮菜馆多标榜正宗原原味,其实亦揉合了不少苏锡菜。“海派菜”即新派上海菜,较多地吸收了粤、川、宁、扬、苏锡等地方风味以及西餐的烹饪手法,讲究推陈出新。与中国其他地方菜相比,上海菜显得细腻雅洁而家常。
上海菜以烹调鲜活著称,特别是鱼虾,非鲜不取,非活不用,有浓油赤酱、色泽鲜亮、注重原味的特色。响油鳝糊、八宝辣酱就是典型的本帮菜。上海本地的各类风味快餐花费不高却能大快朵颐。如果对美食有浓厚兴趣,不妨去藏在市区各个角落的美食街转转,一定不会失望的。
-
上海本帮菜餐厅推荐
上海老饭店 创建于光绪元年(1875年),是本帮菜的发源地,著名中华老字号,地处豫园旅游商业区,以正宗上海菜闻名于海内外。目前老饭店经营的本帮菜有一百多种,油爆虾、八宝辣酱、糟钵头、红烧河鳗、八宝鸭、清炒响鳝、炒圈子、虾子大乌参等是其招牌特色菜,风味胜似当年。地址福佑路 242号豫园(近旧校场路)。 上海老饭店是本帮菜的发源地 c
老正兴菜馆 是福州路上的一家老字号本帮餐厅,1908年挂牌营业,传统古典的牌楼门面,相当醒目,卖的是上海菜,浓油赤酱味道正,招牌菜包括虾子海参、草头圈子等。地址福州路556号(近浙江中路)。
梅龙镇酒家 是不可不说到老字号上海菜,古色古香的装潢,是一家很有风格的店家。梅龙镇的菜不讲排场,每一道菜皆选用真材实料,没有多余盘饰,呈现老而朴实的原味。比如“炒虾蟹”这道菜外观实在不起眼,材料却相当昂贵,以新鲜蟹黄煸出的蟹油再以虾肉入菜,因为真实,所以经典。总店地址南京西路1081弄22号(近江宁路)。
-
上海面食
在上海的美食中,面是另一个不得不被提到的美食,虽然不似北方对于面食文化没有那么悠久的历史,在面的款式上也没那么多花样。但上海在几十年发展中有自己的一套面文化,上海的面条汤清味鲜,清淡爽口。从汤头、面身、浇头、下面、调味,每道工序都有讲究,再加上上选的材料和环境,真是面面俱到。在一些不起眼的小巷街边,有一些颇有传奇色彩的面馆和面摊。
-
上海面馆推荐
吴越人家(淮海路店) 是吴越人家的第一家店,镶嵌在淮海路一条弄堂中,苏式评弹、红木八仙桌、六角凳,一切都是那么陌生又亲切。带着弹性的细面和清扬的高汤俱已入道,对得起门口“面面俱到”的招牌。推荐浇头:醇香排骨、罗汉净素、八宝辣酱、 鳝丝。地址:卢湾区淮海中路706弄10号,近思南路。
真如羊肉馆 一如八十年代的样子,古老的长方凳,油油的桌子和斑驳的墙面,仿佛时代在这里原地踏步了。面和羊肉是分开上的,大块红烧羊肉伴着红汤,用扎鞋底的那种粗线扎着的。羊肉咬到嘴有点甜,皮硬中带着酥软,肉也是,许是扎的功劳吧。面是白汤,手工制作的扁的小阔面,吃起来特别有韧劲。红烧羊肉面12元。地址:普陀区北石路155号(近兰溪路) 。
宝泰面馆 是上海屈指可数的24小时营业的面馆。这家的汤是浓油赤酱类型的,油水够重,非常浓郁。面的浇头基本都是现炒的,很入味,量也足。中午的时候人气特别旺。人均15元,推荐浇头:大肠面、青菜肉丝、猪肝、 素鸡。地址:瞿溪路1072弄1号。
-
老字号海派点心
绿波廊
招牌点心:眉毛酥
地理位置:豫园城隍庙九曲桥旁 人均消费:50元
联系电话:021-63280602
绿波廊是城隍庙里的老字号,慕名前往的游客很多,尤其是外国人。这里中午和晚上总是门庭若市,菜价也不便宜,但喝个下午茶还是不错的,迷你粽、素菜包、小笼等九道干点加上一份水果羹,即可尝尽绿波廊里的招牌点心。其中最著名的是三丝眉毛酥,外形纤巧犹如一道弯弯的秀眉,外层酥皮层次清晰,轻脆细致,内馅有猪肉丝、香菇丝、冬笋丝,一口咬下去,松脆的酥皮与鲜美的馅料在口中交融。
松月楼
招牌点心:海棠糕、素菜包
地理位置:豫园商圈旧校场路近百灵路 人均消费:19元
联系电话:021-63553630
尝遍绿波廊的招牌点心后,如果仍然意犹未尽,不妨去不远处的松月楼品尝一下那里的海棠糕和素菜包。松月楼里的海棠糕,一团豆沙,一块甜冬瓜,味道非常地道; 素菜包子皮薄,馅微甜,菜、香菇、烤麸,只是体积略微小了一点。店里还有素菜和素面可吃,点了碗腰花面,1厘米宽的面条滑爽弹牙,素腰花浇头量很足,几片胡萝卜点缀其间。对于不好辣的朋友而言,浇头偏辣,需要过一下醋,去辣顺道带出酸、辣、鲜的新口感。
王家沙
招牌点心:蟹粉系列
地理位置:南京西路石门一路口 人均消费:24元
联系电话:021-62530404 62170625
王家沙南京西路旗舰店前两年整修一新,虽是旧貌换新颜,这里的招牌美食蟹粉系列点心味道还是一贯地道,值得大家夸耀,尤其是蟹粉小笼。笼屉上来时,四个粉嘟嘟的小笼脑袋上都顶着一朵蟹黄。轻轻一口咬破外壳,小笼皮薄薄的,随之扑鼻而来的是鲜香的蟹粉味,还有依稀可见的满满的汤汁和金黄色的蟹肉馅。
鲜得来
招牌点心:排骨年糕
地理位置:云南南路美食街 人均消费:15元
联系电话:021-63261284 63366108
鲜得来排骨年糕也是上海美食界的“中华老字号”,在上海提起鲜得来的排骨年糕可以说是家喻户晓、妇孺皆知。排骨外皮酥松,肉质紧实;经过排骨肉汁洗礼的年糕,入口鲜美细腻又不失韧性。
沈大成点心店
招牌点心:各色糕团
地理位置:南京东路浙江中路口 人均消费:20元
联系电话:021-63224926 63225615
沈大成创建于光绪元年(1875年),至今已有130年历史。条头糕、赤豆糕、双酿团、糍毛团……各色各样的糕团是这家老字号的招牌点心。条头糕外面的糯米很软很糯,里面的豆沙、芝麻很香甜,双酿团、糍毛团等也糯糯甜甜的,一直是经典又传统的味道,特别受到“糯米主义者”的青睐。而店门口专供外卖的窗口处,据说永远是排着长龙,看来国营风格的服务和怀旧的味道广受欢迎。
其他老字号
小绍兴招牌点心:鸡粥、鸡鸭血汤、鸡骨酱面
地理位置:云南南路近宁海东路 人均消费:35元
乔家栅招牌点心:锅贴、八宝饭、虾肉小馄饨、春卷
地理位置:西藏南路近寿宁路 人均消费:10元
沧浪亭招牌点心:葱油拌面、辣肉面、香菇面筋面
地理位置:淮海中路近思南路 人均消费:20元
功德林招牌点心:素面
地理位置:南京西路近成都北路 人均消费:20元
-
上海知名老洋房菜馆
老洋房是老上海建筑中的极品,是上海短短百余年历史中最精华部分的浓缩。在清静的小街边,浓郁的悟桐树后面一座座幽静的花园里,一幢幢风格迥异、各呈奇姿的小洋楼若隐若现,它们曾经的主人名字响彻历史。得益于复古潮流的风靡,越来越多的上海老洋房被“伯乐”相中,改建为经典餐厅,卖的就是清幽高贵的环境氛围还有洋房背后令食客们浮想联翩的风云往事。
上海大公馆(原杜月笙别墅)
特色:中式草坡庭院结合法式优雅的建筑特色,公馆内保留着上世纪20年代上海滩最华丽时髦的欧式装饰。
地址:徐汇区东湖路7号 人均消费:300元
电话:021-64156666 021-64157777
仙炙轩
特色:原白崇禧公馆,具有法国文艺复兴时期的建筑风格,现在是上海有名的高级日式餐厅。
地址:徐汇区汾阳路150号(近桃江路) 人均消费:400元
电话:021-64313935
上海老站餐厅
特色:原徐家汇圣母堂,餐厅内有浓厚的宗教气氛。花园内有两节老火车车厢,曾经的主人分别是宋庆龄和慈禧太后。
地址:徐汇区漕溪北路201号(近南丹路) 人均消费:180元
电话:021-64272233
席家花园
特色:席家花园总店座落在当今上海最高档的餐饮休闲区域——衡山路领馆区内,其建筑为一幢1913年建造的欧式花园洋房,原为国名党中央银行行长席得懿得私人豪宅,酒家因此取名“席家花园”。香樟与梧桐掩映。叶子散发出来的香味让人迷醉……
地址:徐汇区东平路1号 (近岳阳路) 人均消费:150元
电话:021-64747052 64729041
-
上海的老西餐厅
上海的老西餐厅曾是昔日上海滩海派生活的代名词,“红房子”更是凝结了整整几代人对于“上海小资生活”的向往和回忆。这些老西餐厅是爷爷奶奶父母一辈人们念念不忘的谈恋爱约会时吃大餐的地方,而已人到中年的上海人若是小时候被父母带着来这儿“开洋荤”,能回忆怀念一辈子。如果对海派历史气息有情结者,上海的老西餐厅一定是要重点安排的一站。在此介绍一下上海的老西餐厅中至今很有名气的两家:
红房子西餐厅
是老上海最著名的西餐厅,情调一流,经营的法式西菜具有选料考究、操作精细、讲究沙司等特点。虽然沪上的西餐厅越开越多,但红房子,在老上海人心目中的地位,却始终如一,也一度成为张爱玲笔下那个年代老上海的代名词,许多来到上海的老外们,也会来这里,点上一份过去那个年代的经典菜肴。最早的红房子如今发展为两家,一家在淮海中路茂名路口,保留了过去红房子内部传统的装修风格,而陕西南路红房子旧址上,则翻修成现代感设计的环境,风景独好。
地址:卢湾区淮海中路845号(近茂名南路) 人均消费:150元
特色菜:洋葱汤 烙蛤蜊 鹅肝 法式芥末牛排
电话:021-64456291 64374902
交通:926,地铁一号线陕西南路站(二百永新出口)
德大西菜社
这里的西菜口味并非完全正宗,而是经过当年上海大厨们改良过的中西合璧的“海派西菜”,吃的就是个当年的怀旧劲儿。罗宋汤酸甜,咖喱鸡软烂,土豆色拉实在,薄薄的猪排炸得金黄香酥,配上上海本土特产辣酱油,一准儿能吃到在小说杂志电视电影里看到的关于老上海西餐厅的美味镜头。
地址:南京西路473号 人均消费:110元
特色菜:德大炸猪排 德大色拉 罗宋汤 咖喱鸡
电话:021-63213810
-
上海大牌另类菜
1. 品蟹 大闸蟹不是上海的物产,却在上海吃出了名。吃大闸蟹的讲究可以出好几本书,“青背、白肚、金爪、黄毛”是对大闸蟹品种的考究;“九雌十雄”是对品蟹时节的讲究;配以黄酒姜茶是对大闸蟹寒性对冲的考究;用白底瓷盘装蟹是对品蟹心情的考究;用“蟹八件”如工艺品般慢慢地品琢,一只蟹吃完后其蟹壳仍能完整的拼出一只完整的蟹,更是将考究发挥到了极致。
推荐餐厅
王宝和酒家的大闸蟹、蟹粉豆腐在上海好吃蟹的小饕老饕的心目中算是一块金字招牌。店堂十分有老上海的风格,桌子椅子都很紧凑,各种摆设看上去也很有些年代,不禁回忆起当年那些陈旧的时光。人均 150元。地址:福州路603号(近浙江中路)。
六会馆的蟹粉小笼、蟹粉豆腐和蟹柳芦笋都是本帮菜的口味,每一道菜店家都做得十分精致细心,让人下筷子时都不得不矜持。人均100元。自驾车可以泊在马路边或者是新天地的地下停车场。地址:自忠路338号2楼(近黄陂南路)。
2.崇明岛上吃河豚 还有什么可说的呢?内脏剧毒,肉味肥美无比的河豚总是值得人拼死一尝的。崇明岛可能是国内唯一河豚集中饕餮处,是否专门跑到没甚风景的崇明岛上吃河豚,可算是判别真假美食家的标准。崇明岛上的红烧羊肉也算是一绝,据说此羊是当地饲养的,每圈最多只能养4-5只,否则会病死。专门娇气的羊可以想象其品质。
推荐食处
崇明岛招待所“锦绣宾馆”的餐厅,这里的制作比较有保证。清明前后是最宜吃河豚的时令,要价近千元一斤。
提示:最说吃河豚的最高境界是口感微麻,但如果真的口感发麻,最好别吃。河豚之毒是神经毒素,发作起来很快,即使你是美食先锋,也犯不着以身殉豚。
3.青浦吃蛤蟆 全中国唯一可吃到癞蛤蟆的地方可能就是上海的青浦,青浦的练塘特色名吃熏癞四,熏的就是真正的癞蛤蟆,外形不太美观,但口感称得上一绝。如果你到青浦,值得一吃的还有商榻扎肉,五花肉用箸壳包成一扎一扎的红烧,打开箸壳,看上去肥腻的肉吃起来香美出奇,好吃头顶。
相关文章:
开春开胃 搜遍大上海最美味的自助餐厅
出游上海 十大不得不吃的美食
上海滩十大最有“资”有味早午餐厅
上海时尚购物地淘宝攻略大全
上海世博会园区三日游全攻略
上海自助游攻略 三天玩转经典上海
-
-
上海时尚购物地淘宝攻略大全
Posted on April 11th, 2010 2 comments由于特殊的地理位置和历史背景,上海在近现代史上一直是洋人富贾的聚集地,各种高档进口、国产商品丰富多样,素有“购物天堂”的美称。它城市格局的小,与辉煌气派的大形成着鲜明的对比,到了上海除了欣赏大都市的风光外,就是去疯狂地购物一番了……
不管是否要购物,中华商业第一街南京路都是外地游客必逛的一街,且不说在其中的名店、老店中可以尽览上海的特色商品,单是一路走来,就仿佛走入 从历史到现代的店铺进化博物馆;高雅的淮海路上,名店与专卖店云集,在这里可以看到时尚的最前沿,走在路上的青年男女让你觉得走进了一本活生生的“世界时 装之苑”;平民商业街四川北路,商店鳞次栉比,商品琳琅满目,物美价廉,一直是上海老百姓的最爱;南国建筑风格的金陵东路、民族特色浓郁的豫园商城,新崛 起的徐家汇商城、浦东新上海商业城以及“上海的陆上门户”——嘉里不夜城,共同构建了上海的商业形象,这里的商店鳞次栉比,商品琳琅满目,百年老街、特色 商店、名品专卖各领风骚。
如果你想买精品,打开地图你就会明白最值得一逛的地方都被两条地铁线贯穿起来。地铁一号线:从徐家汇到淮海中路是购物的首选线路。尤其是淮海中 路,人说“上海的美女都在淮海中路”,原因不言而喻,就连特色购物网络,也是围绕它铺展开来的。地铁二号线:主线是南京西路,要点是梅龙镇、中信泰富和恒 隆广场。在一、二号线相交的人民广场地下还有香港名店街和迪美,早已名声在外;如果你想买点物美价廉的小商品,就去城隍庙福佑路,那里会使你有意想不到的 收获;如果你想买点漂亮时髦的衣服,却又有些“囊中羞涩”,可以去襄阳路服饰市场考验一下自己的眼光, 上海小姑娘最喜欢逛的七浦路服饰一条街,时髦新潮的 衣服,饰品和鞋子能让人看花了眼也挑花了眼,而且会还价的话价格便宜到不可思议,一定要去!但要注意:1.讨价还价,50%起还价;2.多多比较,才不后 悔。至于购买家电产品,最佳去处是国美、国通或曲阳家电 城,它们推出的“进价”销售,货真价实。
日常生活起居,购买廉价商品,最佳去处是上海的大卖场,如:家乐福、麦德龙、大润发、乐购、易初莲花、华联吉买盛等等,大多分布在内环线以外的交通要 道和居住集中区,此外,还有遍布上海的几百家华联、联华、农工商等超市连锁店和24小时营业的便利店,购物极为方便。
1、商场营业时间一 般在9:00-21:00或10:00-22:00,周末和节假日适当延长,个别例外。
2、商场前有人发给小商品,不必接手,以免纠缠。
3、换季、节庆、店庆是商场打折的时候,别空手而归,以免后悔。
4、在上海部分商厦内实行“三色”标价签制度:蓝色——明码标 签;黄色——削价标签;红色——议价标签。
南京东路篇:
南京东路素有“中华商业第一街”的美称。20世纪初 期,随着“永安”、“先施”、“新新”、“大新”四大著名环球百货商店的兴起,各行各业的商人择此风水宝地开设了数以百计的大店、名店。20年代以后南京 路便是“十里洋场,灯红酒绿”,成为上海最繁荣的商业街。
上海解放后,南京路经过整顿、修建,成为一条繁荣的商业大道。道路两侧,鳞次栉 比云集着约600多家商店,是久享盛名的“中华商业第一街”。蜚声海内外的南京路这几年旧貌换新颜,一方面老字号、老饭店“返老还童”,越来越红火;另一方面,崭新的购物中心如雨后春笋般地拔地而起,新世界、置地广 场、摩士达、曼克顿广场、鸿翔、先施公司等形成了现代化高雅的购物空间。
这里既有各行各业的百年老店、名店、特色商店和个性鲜明的“名牌 屋”,又有充满着欢声笑语的快餐厅;既飘扬着咖啡的沈沈醇香,又回荡着游戏机的喧嚣。
南京东路沿路老店、名店
353号–大陆商场、慈淑大楼/东海大楼、友谊欧洲商城、东海商都
627-635号–老、新永安公司(1918);华联商厦、华侨商厦
690号–先施公司(1917)–上海时装公司、东亚饭店
720号–新新公司(1925)–上海第一食品公司
830号–大新公司(1934)–上海第一百货南京西路商圈:
南京西路从茂名路到静安寺一段,由梅龙镇广场、中信泰富和恒隆广场组成了一个“金三角”。这里中高档消费人群集中、购物环境良好,恒隆广场和中 信泰富商场内的人均占有商业面积都在1.5平方米以上,超过了发达国家购物的人均占有商业面积1.2平方米的标准,顾客可以安安心心地浏览,不用受拥挤之 苦。
“金三角”集中了上海最多的国际品牌,三大商场各自声称其商场内的国际品牌都有上百种,其中恒隆广场,仅一线品牌就有30种以上。
淮海路商圈:
如果你想买精品,那就要去淮海路。淮海路100岁了,不过这条老路上却唱着时尚的歌,许多地方焕然一 新:街心花园、法国梧桐,还有雁荡路上的露天咖啡馆。淮海路号称有浓厚的海派情调。
从西藏路开始往西走,淮海时尚购物开始了。淮海东路有 一个百货大楼群,囊括上海广场、太平洋百货,香港广场,连卡佛,百盛,美美百货等。
百盛购物中心是淮海中路上值得一去的地方,因为它的平 易近人。首先,它的服饰品牌以中档为主,价格让人容易接受;其次,百盛大折扣的商品也很实 在,货品充足,种类繁多,绝不像有些打折,其实只有寥寥几件式样不怎么样的滞销衣服顶着个空架子。可以把百盛比做小家碧玉,在里面买衣服,一定是有品牌 的,而这品牌又不是高不可攀,而是十分贴心的,舒适的。
百盛边上的陕西路布满外贸服饰商店和各种精致的美食小屋,让你在逛街的同时不忘有 美味的享受,沿陕西路走到淮海路百盛购物中心,想买一些名牌高 档物品的游客可以好好地逛一逛。陕西路的最大特色还是鞋子和精美小礼服,在长乐路附近,已小有规模地集合了一批鞋店。不要小看这些不太招摇、规格不大的 店,其中也有一等一的国外名牌鞋,而且价格也可以接受。
出了华亭路,步行回南京路并不远,中华商业第一街南京路都是外地游客必逛的一条 街。且不说在其中的名店、老店中可以尽览上海的特色商品,单是一路走来,就仿佛走入从历史到现代的店铺进化博物馆。即使不买东西,南京路的夜景也是值得欣 赏的。
交通:地铁一号线黄陂路站、陕西路站,公交线路42、926、24、126、911等
淮海路主要购物中心
上海市第一百货淮海店 淮海中路523号 53061818
巴黎春天益民百货有限公司 淮海中路939号 64310118
上海九海百盛购物中心 淮海中路918号 64158818
益民商厦 淮海中路645号 63580835
上 海二百永新大厦有限公司 淮海中路887号 64746800
太平洋百货淮海店 淮海中路333号 53068888
上海国际购物中 心华亭伊势丹 淮海中路527号 53066666
上海新华联商厦 淮海中路755号 64458000
中环广场 淮海中路381号 63916297
上海市妇女用品商店 淮海中路449号 63721595
古今胸罩公司淮海店 淮海中路666号 53067697
上海钟表商店 淮海中路478号 63278921
红星眼镜公司 淮海中路598号 63275069
上 海先施公司淮海店 淮海中路138号 63845670
全国土特殊性产食品公司 淮海中路485号 63721446
上海床上用品公 司 淮海中路808号 64730550
上海市第二食品商店 淮海中路955号 64307777
上少兴华旅游购物商场 淮海中路58号 62803792
上海龙风金银珠宝商店 淮海中路750号 63843458
上海红房子西菜馆 淮海中路845号 64374902
上海新光侬侬婚妙公司 淮海中路458号 63275567
上海香港三联书店 淮海中路624号 53064393
大方商厦 淮海中路758号 64370290
永新大厦有限公司 淮海中路887号 64746800
黄金世界商厦有限公 司 淮海中路988号 64729228
锦江购物总汇 淮海中路776号 64319620
雪豹城有限公司 淮海中路627号 63588528
天宝金银首饰店 淮海中路591号 63722166
龙凤金银珠宝店 淮海中路746号 53068551
上 海书城 淮海中路701号 63270428徐家汇商圈:
东方商厦、太平洋百货、六百实业、汇金百货、汇联商厦、港汇广场等大型商场,在徐家汇 广场周围形成了业态结构丰富、特色鲜明、错位竞争、共存共荣的商业格局。
徐家汇太平洋是人气最旺的,它也称得上是最拥挤的百货大楼,一年 四季都在打折,加上累积消费金额大赠送,吸引了不少购物的人,“徐太”里的东西 比较时髦又实惠,千万不要错过。东方商厦的商品品种有6万多种,其中进口、合资商品、国产商品各占三分之一。商场正在提升高档品牌的比例。汇金百货的主流 消费群以白领阶层、职业女性为主,它的商品更讲究品牌。从徐家汇中心商圈延伸出去的华山路专卖店则定位在年轻的消费者上,各种年轻人喜欢的品牌样样都有。
浦东商圈:
浦东的购物商业圈是以浦东南路和张杨路为坐标轴,由第一八佰伴新世纪商厦和时代广场为中心构成的。八佰伴以百货为主,而时代广场以时尚消费为主。以销售国际品牌为主的时代广场尚未完全定型。:
走进时代广场,高雅气势的格局先让你有种舒适 的感觉。一楼是国际名品馆,令人眩目的全球顶级经典品牌多汇聚于此。prada,cucci等,样 式新颖,领导时尚,不过价格也不菲。此时无论你从事何种职业,无论你来自何方,只要想体现自己的高雅品位,这里就是最经典之选。走上二楼国际名品馆,这里 有专门度身定造的会所,可以亲身体验何谓尊贵。三楼时尚少女馆,少女所钟爱的时尚服饰品牌应有尽有,爱逛街购物的女孩们定会在这里发现属于自己的个性和风 尚的东西。四楼是经典仕女馆。来这里的都市丽人们相信格调,深知理想的教条,是唯美主义者。五楼运动休闲馆,你可以看到众多国际名牌运动服饰及其他相关体 育用品、休闲品牌服饰,为热爱运动的你提供全副装备,也许你还能找到些许决战风云赛场的豪情壮志。
时代广场的对面是八百伴,虽然没有时 代广场那么金碧辉煌,但也是数一数二的,而且碰上打折的时候,真的很划算。也有only isprit等年轻人喜欢的牌子,来这里购物不管是服装的款式还是牌子,价格都不会让人失望。
人民广场:
香港名店街和迪美是百分百的小妖街。稀奇古怪的鞋包,古灵精怪的饰品、还有满是花边珠片的小衣服,整个就是新新人类的靓哥酷妹穿的。在这儿买衣 服的多半是非常年轻的少男少女,刚好是酷爱蹦迪的年龄,有种种奇怪的欲望,要表达自己的前卫。这和华亭路不同,华亭路上有不少老外,来自世界各地的都有, 而此地则几乎从没有洋人出现过。多半是因为它太年轻了,它的风格是哈日族、哈韩族们喜欢的。
-
上海时尚购物两日方案
第一天: 大型百货公司和购物商场林立的知名购物街区
上午/下午:去淮海路体验上海最时尚潮流的购物商圈
在上海广场、太平洋百货,香港广场,连卡佛,百盛,美美百货等适合白领购物的大百货公司体验上海购物天堂的感觉,附近是陕西南路时尚皮鞋和小礼服一条街。无论是大型购物商场,还是附近几条花园小街边藏在一家家老洋房里的极有格调品位的精品小店,都能感受到逛街购物的极致乐趣。
此外,上海滩著名的童话城堡马勒别墅就在附近,是一栋犹如从安徒生童话中走出的古典建筑,喜欢浪漫情调的朋友一定要去观光一下。
陕西南路在上海“压马路” 爱好者的心目中,甚至可以与南京路步行街的地位同日而语。陕西南路是上海女孩子们最爱逛的地段之一,整整一条路上满满的都是卖鞋子和服装的精品小店。只要会还价,就能买到式样精巧别致价格却比大商场里不知便宜了多少的漂亮皮鞋靴子。这里的服装小店尤其以小礼服为特色,各式风格的漂亮小礼服或古典高雅或精灵俏皮,价格都在几百元左右。
从陕西南路往北走,第一个路口就是著名的新乐路了。这里有些小店的衣服是可以定做的,特别是具有浓郁海派风情的古典旗袍。在这里做一套小礼服或旗袍连料子大概几百元,外面买差不多也要这个价,但这里的式样新颖多了,老板自己会设计,而且做工非常精细考究。
晚上:徐家汇商圈美食购物,夜深去衡山路或茂名路,感受上海第一酒吧街区的激情魅力
徐家汇位于上海市中心城区的西南部,是上海市著名的商业中心之一。同时其周边有龙华旅游城,衡山路欧陆风情街,宜山路建材家具街以及众多的小区购物中心,以及有名的上海天文台、徐家汇天主教堂、徐家汇藏书楼等重要文化设施和单位都落户在这里。
徐家汇商业圈的另一大特色是数码电子产品,这里是上海人及外来观光客购买数码电子产品的首选之地。
徐家汇不但是购物的好地方,美味餐饮更是应有尽有。港汇广场中有不少美食店铺,既有环境高雅的粤菜餐厅,也有舒适可口的中西式快餐。而且在这条街的对面(虹桥路),就是弘基美食休闲广场,从羊肉串到巴西烧烤,从家常小炒到山珍海味都汇聚于此。
血拼累了也正好是深夜时分,正好到离徐家汇不远的衡山路体验一下上海夜生活最精彩的酒吧文化。
衡山路是上海最大、最具魅力的酒吧街,其概念包括衡山路、乌鲁木齐及东平路一带。由于贴近外国领馆区,所以满是异国情调。很多酒吧是依过去老房子改造而成,而每座房子里都有着传奇一般的历史故事,是亲历上海魅力风情的首选之地。
交通:可以从淮海路一路逛到陕西南路,然后在陕西南路乘坐地铁一号线至徐家汇,晚上可以乘坐地铁一号线到衡山路站下,到达衡山路酒吧一条街。
第二天: 潮流淘宝小店聚集区
计划A:地铁沿线的地下服饰商场
人民广场一号线和二号线地铁内有迪美、香港名店街、华盛街等人气极旺的地铁商铺,一家家小店卖的都是最时尚跟风的服饰鞋包,绝对挑花眼。地铁一号线徐家汇站的地下商城也非常有名,上海的小姑娘很早就喜欢在这儿买衣服了。里面服装小饰品都很漂亮,一副非常精致的耳环或项链往往十元左右便可拿下。
位于地铁二号线静安寺出口处的伊美时尚广场也是上海年轻女孩子们喜爱的淘潮流衣饰的好地方,该地下广场内全是一间间小小的精品服饰鞋包店铺。这里的衣服鞋包款式相当潮流跟风,店主们会告诉你这件衣服曾经上过《瑞丽》,这双鞋子刚被《VOGUE》推荐过。花上百元左右就可以买到一件绝对潮流的心仪爱衣,而且还可以砍价。
计划B:服饰批发市场
七浦路上有着整个上海最大的服装批发市场,在全国也很有影响力。来自全国各地的服装商人都会从这里进货,再辗转批发到各处的店面。上海不少位于黄金商圈内的精品服饰屋里卖得颇贵的衣服饰品,有不少也是店主从七浦路淘来的。
去七浦路主要有两幢楼可以逛,一幢是新七浦,一幢是兴旺。新七浦一楼都是那种很大路、很泛滥的东西,广州货、温州货之类的,人也通常很多。二楼有几家比较有得挑的店,卖日式风格的服装,要慢慢看。再往楼上都是一家一家展示厅样子的店,算是做品牌的。不过那些品牌款式大多不太时尚,档次看上去也不高。
走时尚路线的年轻人可以直接逛兴旺。兴旺有两幢楼,一幢是老兴旺,一幢是新的,两幢楼有一座天桥连通。相较之下,老兴旺更值得逛。老兴旺一楼大多是可爱小女孩的风格。有很多类似瑞丽杂志上的款式(都是仿版的),花花绿绿的小裙子,粉粉的连衣裙,芭比风格的衣服和包包。
上海相关文章:
上海自助游攻略 三天玩转经典上海
上海自助游攻略 三天亲子游方案
上海两日文化艺术自助游攻略
三天玩转上海世博会
玩转上海 十大必去景点全攻略
上海世博会外国场馆 精彩亮点提前看
上海世博自助游攻略:美食篇
-
-
Shop till you drop – Shanghai Shopping Guide
Posted on April 10th, 2010 40 commentsShanghai is often touted as a shoppers’ paradise – however you can expect hours of pavement pounding, foraging and bargaining before reaching true retail Nirvana. The good news for those who persist is that the local markets and boutiques can reward the dedicated shopper with awesome finds at prices to suit any wallet.
Like many fashion capitals, the city’s two main boulevards – Nanjing West Road and Huaihai Road – are lined with some of the best Shanghai shopping malls brimming with luxury brand stores and high street labels. Due to heavy import tariffs, the few found fondling the inflated price tags here are usually wealthy domestic customers. For your Dior, Chanel and Armani – best head to Hong Kong. If you don’t mind Pardas and Calvin Keins, there’s always rip-off Qipu Road Clothing Wholesale Market (168 Qipu Rd) or the back alleys surrounding Shaanxi Road (recommended only for the stout of heart).
Of more interest, are the retail enclaves scattered around the vibrant streets of the former French Concession and behind the Bund. Here, local designers present their wares – everything from handmade silk slippers and modern ceramics to organic cotton baby kimonos – offering trendy updates on classic Chinese styles. Other good buys in Shanghai include Oriental rosewood antiques, freshwater pearls and custom-made garments from the city’s legendary tailors.

Shanghai's top street to shop has always been Nanjing Road (Nanjing Lu). Evern more popular among locals, however, is Huaihai Middle Road (Huaihai Zhong Lu).
-
Shanghai shopping – Nanjing West Road and Huaihai Road
High end Shanghai shopping and the glossiest malls are clustered along Nanjing West Road, between Jing’an Temple and Shimen No. 1 Road. Next door to the working Buddhist temple, Jiuguang City Plaza (久光百货 in Chinese, 1618 Nanjing Road) houses Tiffany & Co, Omega and Kate Spade, as well as excellent Japanese supermarket Freshmart in the basement. Opposite this, rising above the interchange of three metro lines, Park Place (越洋广场in Chinese) opened in 2009 offers seven levels of international designer boutique shopping and dining.
Plaza 66 (恒隆广场 in Chinese, 1266 Nanjing Xi Lu, metro line 2 Nanjing Xi Lu Station) is chock full of luxury brands – Louis Vuitton, Dior, Prada, Cartier – on five marble-clad levels. Next door, Citic Square (Zhongxin Taifu guangchang, 中信泰富广场 in Chinese, 1168 Nanjing Road) includes Armani, Bally and Marc Jacobs, while neighboring Westgate Mall (Meilongzhen guangchang, 梅龙镇广场 in Chinese, 1038 Nanjing Road) features Burberry, Ermenegildo Zegna, Coach and an Isetan department store. Between these are more moderately priced fashion outlets, such as Zara, Promod and Marks & Spencer.
Running parallel to Nanjing West Road through the former French Concession, Huaihai Middle Road is populated with European fast fashion flagships H&M, Zara and Mango along with clothing brands from China, Korea and Japan.

In the southern part of the French Concession, Taikang Lu, home to a bunch of art galleries and trendy clubs, also has some fashionable boutiques selling everything from designer handbags to pricey silks.
-
Funky shopping around Taikang Road
What started with a few artists and design agencies moving in to abandoned factory warehouses on quiet Taikang Road, has become Shanghai’s funkiest shopping district. The rabbit-warren of cobbled Shanghai ‘longtang’ (lanes) are flanked by traditional stone-gated residences housing an eclectic collection of fashion, furniture and lifestyle boutiques, craft workshops, jewelers, photography galleries and alfresco cafes. Amongst all this, elderly residents of the alleyways steadfastly go about their daily life, which presents eye-popping contrasts often as fun to observe as the goods on offer in bohemian shop windows. Most of the top Shanghai local brands now have a presence here – following are several good ones not to miss.
Nuo Mi (Lane 274, 12 Taikang Road) by young Chinese-American designer Lin Wen creates cross-culture women and children’s fashions in eco-friendly bamboo, cotton, soya and raw silk that feel as soft and slinky against the skin as they look. Urban Tribe (Number 14, Lane 248 Taikang Road) is a rustic-chic collection of fashion, pottery tea sets, handmade silver jewellery and black-and-white photography inspired by China’s hinterlands, Burma and India.
Japanese model turned designer Maki Hayazono’s two-story boutique Rou Rou (Number 19, 155 Jianguo Middle Road) fuses contemporary streetwear with European tailoring and Asian detailing. The store’s two labels – Rou Rou basics and the high-end Lotus Room – are frequently updated.

Deke Erh Art Center, owned by local photographer and author Deke Erh, Tibetan-themed oils as well as occasional photo exhibits and musical recitals.
Several photography studios include one of the street’s original tenants, photographic historian Deke Erh. The sprawling Deke Erh Art Centre (Number 2, Lane 210 Taikang Lu) presents his images snapped around Shanghai and rural China, as well as books he has published on the city’s fading architectural heritage. Gang of One is a tribute to the rags-to-riches tale of Wang Gangfeng, a former factory worker whose wonderful portraits of characters and street life around China now hang in the Musee de l’Elysee in Switzerland.
The small Duke Gallery (Number 8, 274 Taikang Road) presents a fun collection of contemporary Chinese art and sculpture. Stealing the show is Mongolian artist Guo Qipeng’s ‘Boy Scout’ series of chubby lipstick-red ceramic kid soldiers playing different instruments.
Two of Shanghai’s most promising young designers, Jenny Ji and Helen Lee, also have boutiques at Taikang Rd. La Vie (Number 7, Lane 210 Taikang Lu), stocks the heavily tailored and deconstructed fashions of Jenny Ji, who studied fashion in Milan before returning to her hometown. INSH (200 Taikang Road, 021-6466-5249, www.insh.com.cn) carries the hip, streetwise fashions of designer Helen Lee, while her namesake boutique, further down the alley (Number 3, Lane 210 Taikang Road) showcases a more mature line.
If your Shanghai shopping diary includes sparkling accessories and baubles, three interesting jewelery stores worth checking out are Marion Carsten (Suite 106, Bldg 3, Lane 210 Taikang Road) by a Shanghai-based German jeweler whose striking contemporary designs use bold combinations of sterling silver, leather and pearls. Red Dawn (Suite 105, Bldg 3, Lane 210 Taikang Road) showcases beautiful baubles by homespun talent Dawn Zhu made of jade, pearl, coral and carved woods. For men, JIP’s smart collection of industrial-style accessories combining edgy tungsten, titanium and carbon fibre are designed by an international team of artists but manufactured in southern China, which keeps the line surprisingly affordable (Number 51, Lane 210 Taikang Road).
In the building that started it all – the International Artist Factory – Nest occupies an airy loft space where nine locally based clothing, home wares and product design companies have formed an eco design collective, championing cutting-edge design, sustainable materials and responsible manufacturing. For cottage industry in action, visit Harvest Studio downstairs (Suite 18, Bldg 3, Lane 210 Taikang Road). Here, Miao minority women from southern China gossip as they hand embroider ethnic-styled cushions and clothing. Also in the building, Cosmos Design (Unit 112, Bldg 3, Lane 210 Taikang Road) features contemporary home accessories by Cosmo Chan made from rich brown zisha ceramics, popular in the Ming dynasty.
When your Shanghai shopping binge gets too much for you, release you own creative energy with easel and acrylic paints at Jam Art Space or grab some excellent pho noodles at Pho No.1 Vietnamese Cuisine (Number 13, Lane 248 Taikang Lu).

About as classy and pricey as you can get in Shanghai shopping, this ritzy development "Three on the Bund" has a Georgio Armani flagship store and other not-too-shabby mouthfuls such as Ann Demeulemeester, Bottega Veneta, Vivienne Tam, Yves Saint Laurent.
-
Prime Shanghai shopping – The Bund
The gentrification of Shanghai’s iconic riverfront Bund has seen luxury brands – Giorgio Armani at Three on the Bund, Dolce & Gabbana at 6 Bund and Cartier, Patek Philippe, Ermenegildo Zegna and Boucheron at Bund 18 – move into the former colonial banking HQs.
These are interspersed with local designer boutiques in the side streets, including Suzhou Cobblers (Room 101, 17 Fuzhou Road, 021-6321-7087, www.suzhou-cobblers.com), selling handcrafted silk slippers and shoes in updated colors and patterns, and Annabel Lee (Number 1, Lane 8, East No. 1 Zhongshan Road, 021-6445-8218, www.anabel-lee.com), whose range of embroidered silk decor and accessories are displayed in a museum-like flagship behind a large red door.
Design Republic’s retail showroom founded by Shanghai-based architects Lyndon Neri and Rossana Hu showcases contemporary furnishings from top international designers, along with their own pieces that are currently all in the rage in many of the city’s high-end restaurants (G/F, 5 Zhongshan Road E1). Meanwhile, on the second floor of Bund 18, Gabbiani (2/F, Bund 18, 18 Zhongshan Road E1), sells hand-blown glassware by the designer of those iconic red Venetian chandeliers hanging in the Bund 18 lobby.
-
Shanghai boutique shops in the French Concession
For more Shanghai designer brands and eye candy, cruise the leafy streets of the former French Concession that are lined with tiny boutiques by aspiring local talent. The best stretches lie along Changle Road (between Rujin Number 1 Road and Chengdu Road) and Xinle Road (between Donghu Road and Maoming Road). Julu Road and Jinxian Road contain a smattering of interesting boutiques, while Shaanxi Road is shoe heaven if you fit a size 37.
Streetwear fans will love Source (158 Xinle Road), The Thing (60 Xinle Road), Fly (704 Changle Road) and Eno (139-23 Changle Road). Hong Kong designer Joel Chen’s Pursue by Joel (142 Xinle Rd) offers trendy tailored menswear and women’s evening dresses using quality materials. Pursue’s larger location behind Xintiandi (365 Zizhong Lu) has a fitting studio on the second floor that can whip up custom pieces in around three weeks. Also on Zizhong Lu, is an outlet of Studio PI (Post Industrial), where European-trained designer Lu Min creates recycled daywear and unique party pieces with an almost-gothic feel (347 Zizhong Lu).

Shanghai Tang, the oh-so-hip store from Hong Kong fashion maven David Tang, has spawned several branches worldwide since it first opened in Shanghai in 2003. Besides his signature and pricey traditional Chinese shirts and qipao, you can also pick up elegant scarves, photo frames, bags, and candles.
-
Shopping in Xintiandi lanes
The refashioned traditional lanes and shikumen houses of Xintiandi, on the corner of Huangpi Road and Madang Road, are very popular with travelers on account of the wide array of high-end shopping, dining and entertainment options. Luxurious fashion brand Shanghai Tang (Unit 15, Xintiandi North Blk, Lane 181 Taicang Road, two other branches: 59 Mao Ming Road; Shangri-La Hotel, 33 Fu Cheng Road, Pudong) features men’s, ladies and children’s apparel, home furnishings, accessories and novelty gift items with a colorful nod to Chinese culture. Exquisite cutting and inspired design are reflected in the high-end prices.
The massive flagship store of homegrown label Simply Life (Unit 101, 159 Madang Road), stocks pan-Asia furniture and house ware, including an exclusive range of hand-painted fine bone china from luxury local brand Asianera. Delightful Shanghai Trio (Number 1, Unit 5, Xintiandi North Blk, 181 Taicang Road) blends Chinese motifs with classic French styling in its range of adorable baby wear, bags and accessories.

Shanghai South Bund Fabric Market has all of Shanghai's best tailors all under one roof. Bargain hard to get a fair price.
-
Shanghai tailors for Western-size fits
For those frustrated with the search for Western-size clothing – Shanghai’s legendary tailors can whip up a custom-made wardrobe in a matter of days. Start with a trip to the South Bund Fabric Market (399 Lujiabang Road), where three air-conditioned levels offer vast reams of fabric and trimmings at bargain prices. Bring your favorite pieces and have the onsite tailors sew made-to-measure replicas. Expect to pay approximately Rmb600 for a suit including material and workmanship.

Dongtai Lu Antiques Market, not far from Xin Tian Di, is Shanghai's answer to Beijing's Panjiayuan Market. Dealers specialize in antiques, curios, porcelain, furniture, jewelry, and wood carvings, birds, and nostalgic bric-a-brac from colonial and revolutionary days (especially Mao memorabilia).
-
Shanghai shopping – pearls and antiques
Shanghai is close to China’s freshwater pearling areas of Jiangsu province and is therefore a great place to buy these precious gems. Mark this down in your Shanghai shopping diary. Shanghai Hongqiao International Pearl City (3721 Hongmei Lu) is a multi-level pearl emporium. Most of the action is found on the third floor, where vendors sell a wide array of fresh water pearls and semi-precious stones, along with inexpensive crystal and plastic beads. Buy readymade jewelery or create your own custom designs, which can be strung on the spot.
The five-storey wholesale antique market at Cang Bao Lou (457 Fangbang Middle Road) and charming outdoor Dongtai Road Antique Market (Dongtai Road, by Tibet Road) are good places to scavenge for Cultural Revolution memorabilia, Buddhist statuary, art deco furniture and even opium pipes. Although many of the wares are ersatz, this is still great souvenir territory and keen eyes will occasionally spot a genuine antique prize. Bargain hard.
For antique rosewood furniture head to the warehouse showroom of Hu & Hu Antiques in far-flung Hongqiao (1685 Wuzhong Lu). The sisters-in-law Hu have a massive collection of well-restored Chinese antiques and customised reproductions, delivered fuss-free thanks to their fixed-pricing policy and international shipping.
And if all this frantic Shanghai shopping hasn’t left you with an anorexic wallet and swollen feet, then strap on your (probably new) dancing shoes and head on out for a night on the tiles.
-
What to See & Do in Shanghai
Top Ten Shanghai Must-See Attractions
Visitor’s Guide to The Bund: Shanghai’s Newly Opened Waterfront Landmark
Modern Architectural Wonders of Shanghai
-
Where to Dine in Shanghai
Taste of Shanghai – A Guide to Shanghai’s Best Food
- Where to Stay in Shanghai
-
-
Fastest Ferrari (599 GTO) to debut at Beijing Auto Show
Posted on April 9th, 2010 No commentsThe fastest road-going Ferrari in history, the 599 GTO, is set to be unveiled at the Beijing Auto Show later this month, aimed at the company’s most exclusive customers.
It is billed as a limited edition new concept that draws inspiration and technology from the company’s experimental 599XX racer.
With a 208mph top speed and 661bhp V12 engine the GTO is capable of lapping Ferrari’s Fiorano test track in a record 1 minute 24 seconds – that beats the time set by the company’s Enzo supercar by almost a second.
Only 599 examples of the new GTO (which stands for Gran Turismo Omologato, meaning a grand-touring car homologated — approved — for racing) will be built, with prices expected to be around $460,000.
For that customers will get a 6.0-litre engine coupled to a six-speed paddle-shift gearbox capable of launching the 1,495kg (3300 lbs.) berlinetta from a standstill to 62mph in just 3.4 seconds.
A new generation of Ferrari’s carbon ceramic brakes will be on hand to slow proceedings down, while aerodynamic cues taken from the race car and tyres developed especially for the GTO by Michelin promise extraordinary levels of grip.
And if the G-Forces aren’t enough to tell you how fast you’re traveling, then the latest Ferrari also gets Virtual Race Engineer – an in-car system that gives the driver instantaneous information on the car’s performance.
The GTO badge has only been used two other times in Ferrari history. The 250 GTO of the 1960s was built off the short-wheelbase 250 GT and used for GT racing. In the mid-1980s, Ferrari created the 288 GTO (based on the 308 GTB) for Group B racing. Both cars were produced in limited numbers, just enough, in fact, to make them eligible for racing.
The Beijing auto show opens to the public on April 27 by which time Ferrari is expecting all GTOs to be accounted for.
法拉利全新跑车599 GTO 北京车展全球首发
经典的GTO归来了!法拉利599 GTO终于正式发布了,GTO的意思是“Gran Turismo Omologata”,GT是指的GT赛事,而最后一个单词是意大利语,意思是公路版本。这款599 GTO之前已经吊足了人们的胃口,作为纯赛车版599XX的民用版它早就名声在外,即便如此它也是限量供应的。这款车预计于四月的北京国际车展上正式发 布,而且限量599部,预计这次在中国将再一次大卖。
法拉利曾推出过多款GTO车型,最让人印象深刻的还是上世纪60年代的250 GTO,当时就采用3.0升V12的发动机,最大马力为300匹也算是笑傲当年车坛了。今天的这款599 GTO则是法拉利有史以来最快的公路版车型,我们知道法拉利599 GTO是动力是来自于599XX的那具6.0升V12发动机,最大马力为670匹发生于8250RPM,最大扭矩为620牛米发生于6500RPM,而 599XX则是从著名的法拉利ENZO衍生而来,倾注了法拉利几乎全部的看家本事。对比来看,599XX是最大马力为700匹,而599 GTB最大马力为620匹。
尽管性能相比599 GTB Fiorano有显著的上升,但是油耗与CO2排放却进一步改善到百公里17.5升,与411克/公里。这款跑车同样采用现行法拉利较为惯行的后驱结构, 变速器也是同样的六速顺序式结构换挡时间仅需60毫秒,尽可能地从599XX上原搬下来。
法拉利方面称这款跑车的百公里加速时间为 3.35秒,极速可达335KM/H。而且在著名的Fiorano赛道上,法拉利称它的单圈成绩仅为1分24秒,单就数字可能你没有什么概念,要知道当年 的法拉利ENZO是1分25秒,且是当时的新纪录缔造者,因而法拉利方面才敢说它是有史以来最快的法拉利民用跑车。
599 GTO也继承了599XX的多项瘦身技术,大量使用复合材料,车重仅为1495千克,比599 GTB还要轻85千克,重量马力比仅为2.23kg/hp。以操控著称的法拉利为这款车装备了新的弹簧与更硬朗的后防倾杆,还有第二代的电磁悬挂控制系统 SCM2。制动系统采用碳和陶瓷的复合材料,也是从599XX上继承下来的,从100KM/H到静止只要32.5米。
其它的变化包括有 新的前部扰流器,更低的独立风翼,新的侧面车门槛板设计,双曲后分流器与车下护板等。599 GTO还采用了新的发动机罩设计包括进气口,顶盖等,车轮采用20英寸的合金轮毂,前胎285/30后胎为315/35。
内饰方面法拉利采用定制化生产,更长的碳纤维F1换档拨片更易于高速驾驶,一对桶形座椅,新科技方面法拉利引入了一种被称为“可视化赛车工程”的系 统,可以实时监测车子的状态并将车辆的当前性能以可视化形式展现在驾驶者面前。
对于这款车官方尚未公示价格,但是据泄出的文件称售价在 267136欧元,约合人民币213万元。
-
上海两日文化艺术自助游攻略
Posted on April 8th, 2010 1 comment第一天: 领略上海时尚艺术设计基地
上午:泰康路艺术街品味摩登设计艺术
泰康路,一条艺术与建筑和谐共存的上海老式弄堂。艺术气息,小资情调,还有浓浓的上海味道,穿行于错综的弄堂里,不时会有惊喜闯入视线,创意小店,艺术工作室,弄堂人文,让人应接不暇,乐此不疲。想歇脚的时候,随处都是让人喜欢的咖啡小店,恍惚间,以为自己在东南亚的天堂享受生活呢。
泰康路艺术街现在可以称得上是上海最早、最具影响力、知名度最高的视觉创意产业基地, 弥漫着浓烈的艺术气息。这里原是打浦桥地区的一条小街,从1999年陈逸飞利用泰康路的废旧仓库建起了工作室起,尔冬强、王劼音、王家俊等艺术家和一些工艺品商店先后入驻泰康路,这条小街从默默无闻一跃称了著名的艺术街。现在,原先的泰康路艺术街局限于泰康路210弄田子坊老厂房一带, 泰康路上的艺术品、工艺品店、工作室、设计室已经有近百家,除了私人画廊、手工作坊、闲散的露天咖啡座,还有酒吧、铁匠铺、绸缎庄、老虎灶、茶楼以及个性服装小店,是踏访先锋艺术和个性旅游的好去处。
沿着泰康路210弄田子坊往里走,穿过厂房区,便是石库门民居区域了。老房子还保持着原来的风貌,但一家家画廊和设计所已开了出来。原创油画、泰国石雕、陕西民间工艺品、日本和服、西藏唐卡等等,让人目不暇接。
交通:泰康路位于打浦地区,在瑞金二路和重庆南路之间。公交41,17,872,43,931 打浦桥或瑞金医院站下车下午:八号桥上海时尚文化的新地标,附近逛思南路、雁荡路、皋兰路和香山路等上海最有海派风情的浪漫小街
上海市建国中路重庆南路口的“8号桥”,过去的工厂现在是一间艺术家的工作室。现在八号桥成为城市中艺术活动的心灵地,又将上海独特的小资文化发挥的淋漓尽致。 从大门口处法国艺术家创作的大型雕塑《绿门》,到灰砖外墙上鲜亮的玫瑰红色块,以及内部歌剧院般的层叠式休闲吧,无不体现出创意风尚。
晚上:瑞金宾馆经典餐饮群、在有深远历史的典雅怀旧建筑里品尝美食。餐后茂名路酒吧街,是上海年轻人最爱去的酒吧区之一。
瑞金宾馆是一座有历史的房子,它的四号楼餐饮集中国、泰国、印度三个文明古国的餐饮风味,非常奇妙。颇有影响力的民营餐饮品牌小南国也设在其中。
茂名路酒吧街位于茂名南路从复兴路到永嘉路一段, 这里的咖啡吧、酒吧鳞次栉比。午夜时分,茂名路就是年轻人的天堂,是热闹的狂欢地。
交通:泰康路和八号桥都位于卢湾区而且距离比较近,可沿泰康路向东走,之后在沿建国北路走到八号桥。从八号桥到瑞金宾馆可以坐786路,至瑞金二路站下车;或坐986路,坐2站至瑞金二路站下车。
第二天: 赏古玩字画,古寺祈福
上午:游览多伦路文化名人街,这里曾居住了鲁迅等多位文化名人,街边有很多古玩店、画廊和小型艺术品博物馆,老洋房公馆也很有风格。
多伦路是上海虹口区的一条小街,原名窦乐安路,以曾受到清朝光绪帝接见的英国传教士窦乐安命名。修建于1912年,虽在理论上隶属华界, 但却是当时上海公共租界工部局越界筑路的产物。多伦路全长550米,呈L字型,北南相交四川北路,左边比邻明珠三号线,南靠鲁迅公园,街虽短,路曲且幽,夹街小楼,栉比鳞次,使多伦路显示出浓郁的海派文化的深厚历史背景。
一个多世纪以来,上海走过了从开埠时期的沙船鱼村直至形成今日大都市的沧桑历程,真可谓“一条多伦路,百年上海滩”。其中,尤以众多的名人故居闻名海外,名人故居有30多处二十世纪中国最伟大的作家,鲁迅、郭沫若、茅盾、沈尹默、叶圣陶等学者的实践活动,共 同铸就多伦路“现代文化重镇”。同时各国建筑样式在多伦路有着充分而集中的展现,名闻遐迩的鸿德堂,风格各异的孔(祥熙)公馆,白(崇禧)公馆,汤(恩 伯)公馆,使多伦路成为海派建筑的“露天博物馆”。近几年来又引进建成一批博物馆、艺术馆、展览馆和各类文化休闲场馆,既有民间藏筷馆;又有南京钟藏馆; 毛泽东像章馆,而“老电影”咖啡馆,名人茶艺馆,山根沙龙等一批特色酒吧,茶室更让人生切感受“老上海”的迷人魅力。
下午:莫干山路50号,欣赏上海最具规模和影响力的艺术仓库。到上海香火最旺的玉佛寺祈福。
如果想要了解上海的当代艺术,“莫干山50号”是一个无法绕开的名词。坐落于上海莫干山路50号的M50创意产业园是上海艺术界的新地标,与北京798艺术社区一样,莫干山50号是艺术青年喜欢的非主流生活地带,也是上海规模最大的艺术家聚集地.
莫干山50号前身是上海春明粗纺厂,1999年底纺织厂停产,其周围的老工厂纷纷拆除等待房产开发,2000年上海艺术家薛松最早进驻莫干山50号,随后艺术家周铁海、丁乙、曲丰国、王兴伟等人陆续将画室安置在这片旧厂房中。瑞士人劳伦斯创办的香格纳画廊也跟随艺术家一同搬进了这片行将废弃的厂房,他选择了16号楼内的错层空间作为画廊的仓库和展示空间。16号楼原本是工厂的锅炉房,经过一番改造,发挥其高挑开阔的优势成为一个收纳和展出当代艺术作品的空间.
在普陀区安远路东口的繁华闹市里,座落着一座幽静古朴的佛教寺院——玉佛寺。玉佛寺位于上海市普陀区,因为寺内的两尊玉佛而得名并闻名遐迩的。一尊是被称作“镇寺之宝”的释迦牟尼坐像,高1.95米,由整块玉石雕琢而成。这尊像由一整块汉白玉精雕而成,长96厘米,身披袈裟,偏袒右肩,右手支头号侧卧在红木榻上,与北京香山卧佛寺的卧佛造型相同。
晚上:同乐坊泡吧或巨鹿路餐饮休闲街,欣赏浓郁欧式风情的英式经典联体洋房,泡吧、精品服饰小店购物
同乐坊位于静安区北部的西康路、余姚路、海防路三角地块,紧靠繁华的南京西路商圈和长寿路商圈。这儿曾是上世纪20年代上海“弄堂工厂”的聚集区。同乐坊 融上海老城区建筑本色与后现代设计元素于一体,成为一个兼具时尚娱乐和文化休闲产业的场所。它还是上海首批18家创意产业集聚区之一。
上海有许多幽静的小马路,但是能够让人留恋的却不多,巨鹿路算是其中一条。这里是近一个世 纪前的法租界,仍保留着单行道,参天的梧桐把街道两旁的小洋楼衬得悠然静谧,像是沉睡了千年。即使是到了有些喧哗的初春,她仍旧如同旧上海的贵小姐,悠然 自得的走在城市的繁华之中。如此淡定从容,是适合一个人慢慢品味的街道.
上海巨鹿路“欧洲风情休闲街”以主题咖啡、酒吧和特色餐饮为主,辅以部分高档私人会所、DISCO夜总会以及欧美风味的特色食品专卖、高档商品、艺术饰品和礼品专卖等
交通:可乘坐轻轨三号线东宝兴路站到多伦路,到莫干山路,可以从502路虹口足球场站上车,坐5站至上海火车站下车,再步行约480米到达莫干山。莫干山路到玉佛寺路程不远,亦可直接打车过去。玉佛寺边上就是同乐坊,如果要去巨鹿路,可以玉佛寺附近坐113路或76路到静安寺站下车再走约十分钟。
相关文章:
上海自助游攻略 三天玩转经典上海
上海自助游攻略 三天亲子游方案
三天玩转上海世博会
玩转上海 十大必去景点全攻略
上海世博会外国场馆 精彩亮点提前看
上海时尚购物全攻略
-
上海自助游攻略 三天亲子游方案
Posted on April 6th, 2010 1 comment第一天: 带孩子体验高科技的乐趣和力量
上午:体验磁悬浮 7分钟的极速体验,让孩子感受科技的乐趣和力量
上海磁浮列车是目前全世界第一条、也是唯一的一条磁浮列车商业运营线。这列当今世界上最酷的列车,带车头的车厢长27.196米,宽3.7米。中间的车厢长24.768米,14分钟内能在上海市区和浦东机场之间打个来回。
下午:上海科技馆 各种有趣的设施,启迪孩子爱科学的心
上海科技馆是座风格独特、西低东高的建筑,呈螺旋上升的不对称结构,夺人眼球。科技馆是一处让孩子玩一天都玩不够的地方,有不少来上海旅游的孩子在游览过一次科技馆后,向家长请求改日再来玩第二次。
晚上:上东方明珠/金茂大厦88层/上海环球金融中心100层,俯看浦江夜景,坐外滩隧道
东方明珠广播电视塔高468米,位居亚洲第一、世界第三的高塔和左右两侧的南浦大桥、杨浦大桥一起,形成双龙戏珠之势,成为上海世界闻名的新城市地标。在金茂大厦88层观光厅看夜景更是一种享受,被誉为万国建筑博览会的外滩流光溢彩,美不胜收。中国内地第一高楼上海环球金融中心位于100层的观光天阁被吉尼斯世界纪录认证为世界最高观景台,海拔高度达四百七十七点九六米,厅中设有三条透明玻璃地板,漫步其间犹如云中漫步,黄浦江两岸美景尽收眼底。
交通:地铁2号线坐到龙阳站可以乘坐磁悬浮列车,之后继续乘坐地铁2号线至科技馆站下。之后可乘地铁2号线至陆家嘴下,看浦江夜景。
第二天: 野趣横生,让孩子体验大自然的美好纯真
上午: 上海野生昆虫馆,触摸大自然的野性生灵之美
在上海大自然野生昆虫馆里游客可以观赏并触摸到许多活灵活现的昆虫,更可以自己动手制作昆虫标本。这里还时常举办昆虫沙龙,给昆虫爱好者们带来了无穷的乐趣。
下午:上海海洋水族馆,和来自世界各地的海洋生物零距离接触,再买一个漂亮的海洋生物公仔带回家。
上海海洋水族馆是目前亚洲规模最大的水族馆之一,也是世界最大的人造海水水族馆之一。
晚上:正大广场美食购物,和孩子一起在国内最大的玩具反斗城里尽情玩耍
正大广场地下一层为易初莲花超市,三层楼的购物中心汇集了全球顶尖的精品服饰名牌。五至六楼为美食广场。七至九楼则是休闲娱乐中心,里面的星美电影城是上海最顶级的影城之一。逛街购物之余来此玩乐一番也是别有乐趣。正大广场内还进驻了全球最大的玩具及婴幼儿用品专门零售商——玩具反斗城。
交通:
到达昆虫馆和海洋水族馆可以乘坐地铁二号线到陆家嘴站下。因为今天所安排的行程都集中在浦东陆家嘴商圈,各景点间的距离很近,建议全天步行。
第三天:全家在大型主题公园开心畅玩
全天:松江欢乐谷,刺激好玩的大型娱乐设施,让孩子们拥有开心假日
“上海欢乐谷”是一个以“动感、时尚、欢乐、梦幻”为主题的的大型公园,是上海乃至全国规模最大、景色最美、科技含量最高的主题公园。 开园时间:9:00—18:00
交通:欢乐谷位于上海市西南部的松江佘山国家旅游度假区内,地铁九号线佘山站下车,过街至欢乐谷接驳站搭乘公园班车。
相关文章:
上海自助游攻略 三天玩转经典上海
三天玩转上海世博会
玩转上海 十大必去景点全攻略
上海世博会外国场馆 精彩亮点提前看
-
上海自助游攻略 三天玩转经典上海
Posted on April 5th, 2010 No comments-
上海经典游三天方案
第一天: 老城厢 十里洋场 经典建筑 时尚产业 浦江风光
上午/中午——外滩看经典欧式建筑群,体会“亚洲第一湾”的浪漫风情
初访客到达上海,第一站当然要看看最美的亚洲第一湾——外滩。百余年来,外滩就一直是上海的象征,向以“万国建筑博览”而著称。
下午:逛南京路步行街,老字号悠闲购物,品味旧时十里洋场繁华景象
无论是否要购物,中华商业第一街南京路都是外地游客购物必逛的一条街,且不说在其中的名店、老店中可以尽览上海的特色商品,单是一路走来,就仿佛走入从历史到现代的店铺进化博物馆。
晚餐:豫园老城隍庙,品尝美味上海小吃,欣赏上海老城厢生活情境
在最具老上海气质的地方品上海地道小吃美食,而且老城隍庙景区有上海最棒的特色小商品街群,是新奇小玩意儿和旅游纪念品的绝佳地点。
交通:
从抵达站点到——人民广场
从浦东机场到人民广场可以坐磁悬浮列车,在龙阳路转地铁二号线;或乘坐机场3线坐1站至龙阳路地铁站下车,再步行约90米到地铁二号线换乘点,然后转地铁二号线(龙阳路站)上车,坐7站至人民广场站下车。从虹桥机场到人民广场直接乘坐925A线公共汽车即可。而上海火车站或上海火车南站则可以乘坐地铁一号线至人民广场。
人民广场——外滩、南京东路
从人民广场沿南京东路向东一直走就可以走到外滩。
人民广场——豫园/城隍庙
可以在人民广场乘坐930到新北门站下,下车后步行约400米到达;或乘坐980到福佑路站,下车后步行约750米到达;或乘坐145坐1站至金陵东路外滩站,下车后步行约900米到达
第二天:品味怀旧建筑与时尚产业的激情对撞
上午:人民广场的艺术之旅,参观上海博物馆美术馆。这里也是购物中心聚集的地方。
因为多条地铁在此交汇,。此外,人民广场边上的来福士广场是上海市中心最热门的流行地标之一,经常举行时尚选秀、品牌推广。
下午/晚上:游览上海新天地,细细品味石库门老房子里奢华炫目的时尚潮流。晚上这里是上海最棒的露天酒吧区。
新天地已成为“海派文化”的代表之一,在经过精心修复的精致石库门建筑外壳里是一间间品质格调一流的餐厅酒吧、艺术品和服饰精品店。这里已经成为上海“最小资”的地方,可以挑选一个下午,一家家细细闲逛慢慢欣赏买些心头好。
中国共产党一大会址就在新天地的旁边,里面有不少关于党史党建的珍贵史料物品可供参观。
交通:
人民广场——上海新天地
从地铁一号线人民广场站上车,坐1站至黄陂南路站下车。因为两地距离并不是很远,也可以步行过去,一路上可以欣赏上海都市的现代风情。
第三天:江边领略最气派旖旎的浦东风光
上午/下午:游览浦东陆家嘴,领略金融中心的节奏与气派。东方明珠、海洋水族馆和野生昆虫馆等更是孩子们最爱的地方。
从外滩乘观光隧道,先让感受一番美丽奇特的现代声光,出隧道就可进昆虫馆和虫虫们亲近,或是去上海海洋水族馆探索海底的秘密。
之后可到到东外滩滨江绿地和亲水平台、10万平方米的中央绿地玩玩,可以在东方明珠电视塔或金茂大厦或中华第一高楼上海环球金融中心三者中选一参观俯瞰上海全景,然后继续沿世纪大道沿途观赏国际会议中心等现代化城市建筑群,如果是带着孩子游玩,那上海海洋水族馆和边上的野生昆虫馆一定能让孩子们乐而忘返。
晚上:滨江大道美食休街,江边平台享受浪漫晚餐,或去正大广场美食娱乐购物。
吹着柔和的江风,看着黄浦江水涛涛流过,对面就是风情万种的外滩欧式建筑群,在这里吃一顿美味的晚餐,点上精致的甜品和咖啡,浪漫的感觉无法言喻。
交通:
可乘坐地铁二号线陆家嘴站下,或从外滩乘坐观光隧道到达。因为今天所安排的行程都集中在浦东陆家嘴商圈,各景点间的距离很近,建议全天步行。
相关文章:
三天玩转上海世博会
上海自助游攻略 三天亲子游方案
上海两日文化艺术自助游攻略
玩转上海 十大必去景点全攻略
上海世博会外国场馆 精彩亮点提前看
上海时尚购物全攻略
-







































































































Most Popular Posts 热帖排行