Saturday, June 16, 2007

the facebook albums* updated

of the trip for those who don't have facebook accounts.

may 17-19: tiananmen, forbidden city, planning museum

may 20-21: sports u, summer palace, olympic sites

may 22: some wall or something

may 23-25: temple of heaven, hutongs, day off

may 26-28: pku softball, ktv, nanjing rd, yu garden

may 28-29: boat tour, west nanjing, art museum

may 30 - june 2: amazing race, planning mus., lu xun, temple

june 2-4: the last and probably the best

Saturday, June 2, 2007

monday 2

our second monday of the trip and our first full day in shanghai.

on monday morning, we visited the yu garden and walked through shanghai's china town. that's right, shanghai has a china town. in late imperial times, the city was divided up among western powers, and there was only one tiny section where chinese people were allowed to live. this is shanghai's china town.

the yu garden is an old residence of some government official, and it's at the center of a restored, old looking, very touristy area where you can buy a lot of antiques, authentic or not-so-authentic as they may be. you can also buy jewelry and knock-offs of designer bags and watches and an endless array of other touristy items.

the yu garden and the buildings in it are gorgeous, but it makes you wonder how such an imperial relic survived the hard-core communist days. apparently such places were just sealed off from the public for years. it and places like the summer palace and temple of heaven in beijing show how much the government takes advantage of these imperial relics for economic gain. it also demonstrates how little the party adheres in practice to its ideology.

after haggling and making some good deals on touristy crap, we went to the river for a cruise that showed us the skyline, and the insane amount of development on the river stood in contrast to the preserved, old yu garden. it seemed like there were as many buildings going up as there were already standing. shanghai boasts two of the very tallest buildings in the world. one is not yet finished, but it's construction is paused right now because the builders want to wait for a rival building in taiwan to be finished. that way, they can make sure that this building is definitely the tallest building in the world. another interesting thing about that building is that it is either owned or being developed by a japanese businessman, and that, combined with the original design that called for a hollow circle at the top of the building - reminiscent of the "sun" of japan - didn't fit well with the nationalist ideology so important to china's political stability. so anyway, the design had to be changed so that the building will now have a hollow square at the top instead of a hollow circle. it will look a lot uglier, in my opinion, but i guess those in charge don't care as much about aesthetics as they do about national pride. so yeah, lots of construction along the river, and a ridiculous amount of barges and ships getting loaded to bring cheap goods to the us and other countries.

okay.

THURSDAY

we toured the hutongs, which are some of the older, poorer parts of beijing. my group biked around the city, and while it was hot, and the weather that day on weather.com called for "widespread dust" (no, i'm not kidding), and it took a long time, it was a good time. our groups were competing to find as many random things as possible on a list compiled by our professors. for example, some items on the list were to find the dirtiest public bathroom, the cutest kid, or a street that looked like baghdad. there are a lot of streets in the hutongs that look like baghdad because some hutongs are being torn down since they're not generally the beijing that the government would like people to see. anyway, it was hot, and biking in beijing traffic is always going to be an adventure, but after five hours and many collected pictures, our group felt a real sense of accomplishment for all we'd done that day. personally, i really enjoyed the fact that the trip helped me get a better sense of where things are in beijing.

but also, the hutongs are a part of beijing that tourists don't usually bother to check out, and they're still a large and important part of the city. a lot of beijing looks and feels not much different from the us, but the hutongs, with their old, crowded, one-level houses and poverty and extremely narrow streets really did seem foreign.

anyway, i don't feel like i can accurately do justice to the experience in words. it was a good experience on so many levels. we got to see a part of beijing that really seemed foreign, and it gave us a fuller picture of what beijing is like. the hutongs also presented a direct critique to the modern beijing portrayed in the beijing planning museum and by the beijing planning commission. also, i really enjoyed the satisfaction of having biked for four or five hours straight. i had walked the great wall a few days earlier, and i felt so fit after all the walking and biking. i'm not generally a big exerciser, but i enjoyed that exercise.

FRIDAY

friday was our day off. i spent most of the day updating this blog, which took a ridiculously long time (you're welcome, mom and dad! :) ). this was because of the time it took to upload photos, and it's also the reason i won't be uploading any more photos in china. maybe i'll add photos to these posts when i get home.

but anyway, there isn't much to talk about for friday because i spent so much of the day blogging. i didn't really feel obligated to spend a lot of time looking around the city because our days had been so full for a week and a half or so. but later in the day i did venture out because i wanted to force myself to actively explore the city on my own instead of passively following whomever i was with, like i had been doing. i also really wanted to see the progress on the cctv building, which, when finished, will be the tallest building in beijing and certainly one of the most stunning in the world. the building isn't yet finished, and it was starting to get a little dark when i got there, but i got to take some pictures. even though the building isn't done yet, the two rising columns that have been built so far do look really impressive because they aren't perpendicular to the ground or parallel to each other.

SATURDAY

we went to beijing university to play a softball game with some of their students. we were all a little apprehensive about what the final score would look like. we were all afraid that we'd be playing against the university's team and that we'd lose badly. the team we played did have a number of players from the official softball team, but it was mostly made up of amateurs like us. it ended up being a close game at the end, and we pulled off a win in the last inning. despite the fact that most of us had not played softball in a really long time/ever, and despite the heat, which was kind of ridiculous, we all had a really good time.

we had the rest of the afternoon off, and i wanted to use it to check out a rene magritte exhibit i saw from the bus on the way to beijing university, but by the time i had reassured myself as to the museum's location and by the time i had walked there, the museum was already closed for the day. this was really frustrating, because i was fairly certain i had biked right by the museum on thursday and somehow missed the gigantic rene magritte sign in front of it. if i HAD seen it, i could have gone to the museum on friday, our day off. but since we were leaving beijing early sunday morning, i wouldn't get the chance to see the exhibit. so anyway, i can't believe i missed out on that opportunity, and i was a little disappointed by that, so on the walk back down wangfujing, i stopped to buy some clothes, which were ridiculously expensive by normal beijing prices and not exactly cheap by us prices either.

that night some of us went to a karaoke club that is way nicer than most karaoke places in the us. in that club, there is a private room for every party/group with a leather couch and a big tv. so yeah, really nice, but the privacy undermines part of the fun of karaokeing, which partly derives from letting go of your inhibitions and singing horribly in front of strangers. also, that club had a seriously limited collection of songs we knew by us standards for karaoke clubs, but we still had a really good time.

SUNDAY

we departed for and arrived in shanghai. the flight was short and uneventful, although i did get a window seat, which was awesome. :D how to describe shanghai? well, it's even busier and more crowded and less green than beijing, although it does have some parks. shanghai developed at the same time, and probably faster, than many american cities. anyway, i'll show you pictures when i get back. and i'll update more later today.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

wednesday

in the morning we went to the temple of heaven, where the emperor used to come to make sacrifices and pray to heaven for a good harvest and general well being. now, of course, the temple is no longer a religious site, since its religious importance was derived from its relationship to the emperor. so today it is a public park.

but the interesting thing about the temple of heaven is that it really is used by the public. one thing we've noticed and have been talking about as a part of the class is the extent to which exercise is public in china in a way it is not in the united states. you'll walk out to catch a taxi at 9 at night, and you'll see older people doing tai chi on the side walk. there are also parks that look like playgrounds, but they are very different in one big way from american playgrounds. check out this video i took to see how these chinese playgrounds are different.



so yeah. all the people at the playground-type-thing were adults. there were large groups of people waltzing as a form of exercise. there were people singing and playing instruments. parks in china do not have the same uses that parks in the US have. most people wouldn't think of going to their neighborhood park and working out like the people in the video above are.

see, there would be pretty green paths like this one that look just like a us park. the only difference is that along the way you'll run across some dude going like this and some crazy american tourist obnoxiously taking a picture of him.


of course, the park is also an important historical site, and i took some pictures of the buildings.

but for whatever reason, despite the fact that i saved this post, the pictures didn't save, and there's no way i'm uploading them again. my computer said that the internet at the beijing hotel was 10 mpbs, and it says this one is 100 mpbs, but it is taking way slower for whatever reason. so i've taken some pics of interesting stuff, but it just takes way too long to upload them. seriously. like we're talking about maybe 10 minutes to upload 4 pictures. it's crazy. so no more of that.

anyway, so the temple of heaven was interesting. after that, we visited the practice facilities of the beijing tigers, a professional baseball team. baseball is not very big in china, as was evident from their field - not a lot of room for fans. there was also an american on the team. he was from pennsylvania and played baseball in college for vanderbilt. he's using his position on the tigers to get to see another country and to maybe get some experience that would allow him to work in the front office of a us major league team. when we got back, some of us went off to dinner and wandered the streets of beijing. that was last wednesday.

it was right near a velodrome and the olympic field hockey stadium. we got to ask their manager questions.

Friday, May 25, 2007

tuesday

we went to the great wall. that's really all i did that day. if i remember right, we were all on the bus by about 5:50. we got to the wall at maybe 9:30/10:00. we walked 12 km, and those were 12 km that were almost as vertical as they were horizontal. it rained. it poured. it was cloudy and green and gorgeous. at certain points i thought it was the best workout i'd had since irish dance. i took lots of pictures - almost 200 - way more than i could post here. it made me glad to have a digital camera. mom and dad, remember when you sent me to italy with a disposable camera only to discover, upon paying for developing the film, that i used it all up on pictures of the countryside on the way to assisi? anyway, we took our time and finished somewhere between 2:30 and 3:30 and got back a little after 6, i think. i then went to get a much-needed massage, came back to my room, and fell right asleep. i'm not sure i even ate one real meal that day besides the food i had bought at the supermarket the night before. my hamstrings felt sore when i walked down stairs for the next two days, but it was totally worth it. the beauty was absolutely surreal, and it was a great break from the hustle and bustle of beijing.

vinnie, michelle, tom, and the poor peasant who was assigned by his comrades to walk along with them, "help" them climb the wall, and pester them to buy stuff from him.


even the walk up to the wall was steep, although you wouldn't guess it from this picture.

almost to the top.

finally to the wall. i took a lot of these through-the-doorway/window shots. i'm kind of a sucker for them. they always look so awesome.


looking back at how far we'd come:
we did a lot of stair climbing that day. seriously, my ass better look amazing after this trip.










no, seriously, lots of stairs. this was more vertical than you'd think.






i realized i should probably get a picture of myself on the wall

terraced farming.







at the very end we had to cross a suspension bridge and climb one very steep set of stairs

the view from the bridge. honestly, it was like something out of lord of the rings.



and we got back to our bus. in front of it was a very wet and sorrowful looking dog.

monday

seriously, i'm getting behind on the updating. i'm going to try to keep this short. also, note that i added some related links at right. one of my professors is posting his pictures on a flickr site, and one of my classmates is guest blogging for the star trib about our trip. also, i'll try to keep that google map site updated. the google map should help give some sense of the layout of the city and where everything is. at least, it's helping to do that for me.

on monday we went to the beijing planning committee's headquarters. on the way there, one of our professors passed around a newsweek that had an interesting article about how cheerleading is growing as a sport in china. i liked the article, but i thought that a certain diet coke drinking segment of this blog's readership would find the following article more interesting. you can click on the pictures to make them bigger.



outside the headquarters of the beijing planning commission was this sign, which can be found all around beijing. i'm not sure what it's actually saying. no horn playing? no music? no playing music on the streets to try to get money? oh that reminds me - on a completely unrelated note, there were a lot of street musicians in the subways by tiananmen square. what is interesting is that they all were playing what looked to be home-made instruments.

we were privileged to be able to attend this meeting, and it was really interesting to an amateur public policy wonk like me. the presentation described how the olympics fit into beijing's plan for the future. specifically, they wanted to prepare a green, high-tech, people's olympics as a part of beijing's plan to become a green, high-tech, people's city. the presentation got me thinking about a lot of things. first of all, and most simply, i loved how the tools they mentioned as being useful to a city planner in beijing were all programs that are installed in the computers in the geography lab where i work on the fourth floor of blegen hall - GIS software and photoshop.

secondly, it got me thinking (more than i already was) about the balance between china's economic liberalization, the controlling power of the communist party, modern public policy in china vs the us, and the modern public bureaucracy in china that puts policy into action (especially as compared with the civil service in imperial times and the possibly more party-loyalty/ideology-oriented bureaucracy of earlier communist times). i honestly didn't get the impression that the lower bureaucracy functioned much differently in china than it does in the us. i want to know more about how all of these things interrelate, but it's very possible that the only ones who really know these things are the ones who are actually a part of the public bureaucracy. furthermore, i'm positive that those relationships are not as static as they currently are in the us. i'm sure beijing's bureaucracy functioned completely differently 10 years ago, and the same can probably be said for the bureaucracy's function 10 years from now.

another thing i was thinking about was the extent to which china, or beijing, really wants to be green. to be sure, presenting onesself as green makes for good public relations, but i do get the impression that china to some extent walks the walk as well as talking the talk. for example, you rarely see recycling bins (off-campus) next to public on-street trash bins in minneapolis, but i've seen a lot of recycling bins next to public trash bins in beijing. i have no clue about the extent of private recycling, however. also, recycling must be encouraged monetarily, because there are a lot of poor people who will walk up to you and ask for your water bottle as you're finishing the last drops. i asked one of the beijing university students about this, and she said that they got money for collecting plastic bottles. also, while small public parks in beijing are few and far between by minneapolis standards, there are a lot of large green spaces, such as the summer palace and the temple of heaven. the problem is that there are so many people that these public green spaces are often as crowded as the streets outside. we were talking about china's being green one day, and people mentioned how solar powered lights were used in rural areas so that power lines wouldn't be necessary. also, some of the boats at the summer palace were solar powered, apparently. some streets also have tree- and bush-lined boulevards or shaded walking paths. the beijing planning committee presentation also focused on a large growth in the infrastructure and use of public transportation to try to alleviate the pollution problems that beijing has, not to mention the transportation congestion. seriously, beijing and chinese traffic deserves a paragraph or two of its own.

wow. haha. also, i only just noticed now that i have a really obvious typo in the spelling of spectacular above. i kind of like spectatular, though. maybe i'll keep it. anyway.

the beijing planning commission headquarters also had a gigantic scale 3D floor map of beijing, like the one planning museum had. the presence of this one is interesting though, because it's not something that the public generally gets to see. i assume it must therefore be for showing off the work of the commission to higher party/state officials, maybe potential business investors, and lucky visitors like us. there were also posters with info on the beijing region's watershed, average temperatures, average wind velocity and direction, and a bunch of other categories.

below is the site of the stadiums built for the asian games. these were at the very top/north of the map, and they are just to the south of the new olympic sites.


this is the temple of heaven. more on that in a few posts when we visit it.

the center of beijing again, with the lakes, the forbidden city, and tiananmen.

after that, the members of the beijing planning commission treated us to lunch at an awesome restaurant. it was by far the best, and most, food we'd yet eaten. there was so much to try, and we were continually surprised by the arrival of more and more dishes throughout the meal.


it was molly t's birthday that day, so she received a bowl of traditional noodles, whose length portends longevity for the eater.

after that, we said goodbye to the planning committee members and thanked them for the presentation and the meal. mr. ma, a researcher at the commission, who knows a little english and spent four months in minnesota, responded with, "you betcha." then we were off to try to catch a glimpse of the new olympic sites.

here's a pic of the bird's nest stadium from the highway. we were still a good distance away from it, and this picture somehow makes it look smaller. i don't know how big it looks to you here, but know that you're probably underestimating its size. it's really gigantic.


from another view. that girl in the blue? that'd be my roommate michelle kwan. don't ask even think of mentioning figure skating to her. this is about as close as we could get. remember, you're underestimating the size.


the sites aren't finished yet, which doesn't really worry me, but it makes a lot of people wonder how they're going to be done in time. but here's the thing - there is construction going on all over beijing at all hours of the day and night. i've seen construction at midnight and at four in the morning. here's some temporary housing that has been built for the workers.

that bubble building is the aquatics center

on the way back from the olympic sites we saw this accident, the first accident we'd seen. a taxi had run into a biker. we were all surprised that it took until monday to see our first accident.

that evening, harlan and i went to a supermarket in one of the malls along wangfujing to buy a cake and really cheap champagne/ sparkling wine for molly's birthday. no really, it was ridiculously cheap. a very large bottle for a little over 3 bucks. most of the food and goods in beijing are ridiculously cheap, but this supermarket sold a lot of imported (i.e., western) goods for almost western prices. discovering this supermarket was exciting for a lot of us because it sold more of the foods we are used to, but the relatively expensive price of everything kept me from buying a lot of it. so far i've been good about sticking to more traditionally chinese food. i did have a big mac the other day when i was short on time. also, it's important to remember that fast food chains are a big part of chinese culture for a lot of people. kfc in particular is really popular, and there are mickey d's everywhere.

by now we all know wangfujing street pretty well since it's a rare day that we don't walk along it at least once. also, it's well known throughout the city, so if you're lost, you can just ask a taxi to take you to wangfujing, and from there you can walk to the hotel. taxis are pretty cheap, too.

here are some pictures of wangfujing. it's definitely one of the ritzier areas of the city.


wangfujing is always busy, but it's especially crowded at night. it kind of reminds me of a lite version of times square, with the crowds and the lights. it's really not anywhere near as crowded as times square though, and it's a shopping district, not a theater district, although i think there are a few movie theaters. also, the street is always noisy. at all hours of the night there are generator running and jack hammers pounding away, and combined with the crowds, it's sometimes hard to hear what the person next to you is saying. the sidewalk of wanfujing looks like a different from day to day due to the constant construction and destruction.

i think that's all. so much for keeping it short. my cousins and brother are now probably currently sitting in the lakeville theater watching the first few minutes of pirates of the caribbean 3. it would be so much fun to be there with them, but i'm not sad to be in china. i'll listen to my pirates ringtone in solidarity.