Your Ad Here
better answers  
sponsors

search
web directory
news
travel
maps
forums
free voip
chat irc
games
video
live tv
add site


News

Shekou Ferry
Terminal China Ferry
Terminal HK-Macau Ferry
Terminal Tuen Mun
Ferry Pier HKIA Skypier Every 30 mins
from 07:30 to 20:30
except no 5:30 or
6:00 but a 5:45 07:30 08:40 07:45 11:15 08:30 10:30 09:30 12:30 10:15 17:00 11:30 14:30 13:30 16:30 15:30 19:30 17:30 21:30

There are several ferries per day from Hong Kong International Airport, HK-Macau Ferry Terminal 港澳码头 (Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong), China Ferry Terminal 中港城码头 (Kowloon, Hong Kong) and Shekou Ferry Terminal 蛇口港 (Shekou, Shenzhen) arriving at the Zhuhai Jiu Zhou Ferry Terminal 九洲港. There is a taxi rank and bus stops directly outside. Visas can be purchased here for most nationalities (not American citizens).

From Macau There is a ferry service operating from Macau's Inner Harbour's Pier 14 ("Yuetong Pier", 澳门粤通码头) to Wanzai. Daily departures from Macau at 8:00, 8:45, 9:45, 10:15, 10:45, 11:15, 13:00, 13:45, 14:15, 14:45, 15:15, 15:45, 16:15. Return trip from Wanzai to Macau usually 15-30 minutes after these times.

[edit] By car

It is possible to drive across the border from Macau. Note that, unlike Macau, China drives on the right.

[edit] By bus

Hundreds of buses come from Guangzhou every day, usually via the Jingzhu (Beijing-Zhuhai) Highway (京珠高速). You can catch one at:


    China (Marriott) Hotel (中国大酒店)
    Guangzhou Baiyun Airport (广州白云机场) just inside the Arrival Hall
    Garden Hotel (花园酒店)
    Provincial bus station (省汽车站)
    Tianhe Dasha bus station (天河大厦车站)
    Liuhua bus station (流花车站) directly opposite the provincial train station

...just to name a few. From any of these, the trip will cost ¥60 to ¥65 and take about 2.5 hours. Buses leave every half hour and go to Gongbei. Along the way, they usually make a stop at Xiangzhou (香洲 Xiāng-Zhōu) and Suidaonan (隧道南 Suì-Dào-Nán).

Zhuhai has several bus stations:


    One is underground, accessed from the lower level of the underground shopping centre at the Macau border.

    The main Gongbei bus station is off to your right as you leave the underground shopping center by the Northeast Exit.

    Xiangzhou also has a large intercity bus station. Take #2 or #10 city bus to reach it from Gongbei.

[edit] On foot

You can walk across the border from Macau at Gongbei. The border is open 7:00 am - 12:00 midnight.

An alternative crossing is via the Lotus Bridge in Macau's Cotai area to the island of Hengqin. This border crossing point is open 8:00 am - 8:00 pm only. After crossing the Macau side, take a shuttle bus across the bridge to the China side (fare RMB 3, no change given so carry the exact amount). From the Hengqin side of the border take bus number 14 to Xiangzhou, or catch one of the Kee Kwan air-conditioned minibuses to Wanzai or Gongbei (5 RMB).

[edit] Get around

Zhuhai is quite spread out. The terrain is coastal plain broken up by mountains or, seen from the sea, a series of bays and headlands. There are many clumps of development separated by hills, often parkland.


    Within any district, you can walk or take a taxi from ¥10.

    To move between districts, use buses. These are ¥1 to ¥3, depending how far they go and whether they are air-conditioned.

    The double decker sightseeing bus bus goes to most areas between Gongbei and Jinding for ¥3. Padded seats and good air conditioning make it a lot more comfortable than city buses for long trips. Last run is at about 7pm.

[edit] Talk

Cantonese is the indigenous language of Zhuhai, it being a part of the Guangdong province. Nevertheless, due to the massive influx of immigrants from other parts of China over the last two decades, Mandarin is now considered the lingua franca. English is not well understood here.

[edit] See


    8.7m tall Fisher Girl statue (渔女 Yú-Nǚ), the city's symbol, along Lovers' Road (情侣路 Qíng-Lǚ-Lù). Take the sightseeing, 9 or 99 bus.

    Take a walk along the coastline by Lovers' Road. Majestic view of the Macau skyline across the border, but the sea tends to be brown and muddy most of the time.

    Swimming and sunbathing on the beach of several islands (50 mins by boat from Zhuhai).

    Pearl Land (珍珠乐园 Zhēn-Zhū-Lè-Yuán), an amusement park in excess of 40,000 sqm on the coastal road north of town, near the Zhuhai International Circuit. Entrance fee is ¥60 for adults and ¥30 for children under the height of 1.4m. Take the sightseeing, 3, 10, 68 or 69 bus.

    An amusement park to the west of town.

    The New Yuanming Palace (圆明新园 Yuan Ming Xin Yuan ) is located at foot of Big Shilin Mountain of Jiuzhou Road,to the northwest of Zhuhai City. The New Palace is an immitation of the Yuanming Palace in Beijing and it covers an area of 1.39 square KM. Inside the park there is also 80,000 square metres of lake and along the lakeside there are many opportunities to hire motor boats and pedelos. The Park has many attractions from ancient Emperor's artifacts and clothes to floating restaurants and traditional Chinese architecture. It offers amazing photo opportunities with the mountains as a backdrop and there are many little pagodas to distract your attention. In the evening, at the Northern side of the park, there are impressive stage shows depicting traditional Chinese dances and stories in a Broadway style musical presentation. A must see. Also, in the Northern most part of the park there is a sea-battle re-enactment using real boats, explosions and also a troop of calvalry to add to the realism. These shows are included in the entrance fee although premium tickets for good seats can be purchased for ¥5. On exit you also have the opportunity to dress in the Emperor's clothes and have your picture taken for ¥40. You are allowed to take the pictures with your own camera. The photographers charge very expensively for a printed and framed copy of your picture. Don't buy it if you feel it's not worth it. Entrance to the park is ¥100 before 18:30 and ¥60 thereafter. The Park closes at 23:00. A 15 minute bus ride from GongBei Lu. Take bus 1, 25, 30, or 60.

[edit] Do

[edit] Motorsports

Go to the Zhuhai International Circuit (珠海国际赛车场) where you can:


    Watch and enjoy the atmosphere of international auto and motorcycle racing which includes the FIA GT Championship, Champ Car World Series, Asian Formula 3 Series, Asian Festival of Speed and ZIC's very own Pan Delta Super Racing Festival.

    Receive expert instruction and spend a half hour on the actual race course in a formula car for $1500 HKD.

    Rent go carts and motorcycles for use on a separate track.

    Take the ride of a lifetime by buckling up on board Asia's one-and-only 2-seater formula car while ably driven by an ART Motorsports professional racing driver. Enjoy the ride for a few laps or for a group of friends, share a full 30-minute session at 2-3 laps each.

[edit] Golf

There are several golf courses in the area. These are popular with Hong Kong players who come on weekends as they are cheaper and less crowded than those in Hong Kong. For more details see Golf in China. There is also a driving range in Jida, use the number four bus.

[edit] Learn


    Beijing Normal U and Beijing Institute of Technology, on a side road just before Jinding, 69 bus from town or 70 from Jinding. Also United International College, a private university jointly run by Hong Kong Baptist University and Beijing Normal University, teaching entirely in English.

    Harbin Institute of Technology and Zhong Shan U, on main coast road North of town: 3, 10, 69 or sightseeing bus.

    Several universities West of town, towards Doumen.

[edit] Buy

The legal tender is the Chinese Yuan, also called Renminbi (RMB) or people's money. Hong Kong Dollars and Macau Patacas (MOP) used to enjoy a one-to-one exchange rate with the RMB, but with the RMB's appreciation in value over the last few years, they are either no longer accepted or accepted by converting from RMB according to the current rate (currently, July 2007, RMB100=MOP105).

ATM machines are plentiful usually at banks. If you have a "western" ATM card, use an international bank like "Bank of China" or HSBC, etc. Chinese banks don't always recognize "western" ATM cards even if it shows the correct system affiliation.

Cash is king; however, credit cards are accepted in some surprising places. You may have to ask to use a credit card. Don't be surprised if the proprietor goes down to street to use a credit card machine. Shops are sometimes owned by the same family and they share the credit card machine. Expect to pay a rate based on Hong Kong dollars rather than RMB. This goes for Macau too.

Zhuhai-Macau border; red building is customsZhuhai-Macau border; red building is customs

The official receipt issued by merchants in China (for the purpose of tax collection by the government) is called Fa Piao (发票 Fā-Piào). Always ask for one if you need to declare your expenses. They are available from hotels, taxis and restaurants etc.

[edit] At the border

There is a huge underground shopping complex (拱北地下广场 Gǒng-Běi-Dì-Xià-Guǎng-Chǎng) right at the Macau border in Gongbei. In the picture, the entire open concrete area has two floors of shops under it. There are several hundred shops, many with goods targeted to tourists - clothing and shoes, jade and other jewellery, crafts including a lot of Tibetan stuff, consumer electronics, and so on.

There are also many CDs and DVDs, mainly unlicensed copies. Also available in abundance here are imitation watches with incredible resemblance to the real stuff (Rolex, Breitling, Patek Philippe and Omega, just to name a few). Even among these fakes, differences in grade can be seen for the same model in different shops. Whatever you buy here, always bargain and bargain hard.

Always test the product before paying for it and walking away from the shop. Remember where you bought the item. You will never get a refund; however, "Gongbei" shop owners are surprisingly diligent about protecting their reputation. They will exchange defective merchanise.

[edit] Elsewhere in Gongbei

Ying Bin PlazaYing Bin Plaza

    Yingbin Road (迎宾路 Yíng-Bīn-Lù) is the main street that goes straight north from the border. Number one and number two North exits from the underground complex lead to opposite sides of Yingbin Road. It has several large shopping complexes with everything from cheap Chinese goods to trendy pricey international brands. On the left, there is Wanjia Department Store (万佳百货 Wàn-Jiā-Bǎi-Huò) which is the most recognizable landmark in Gongbei by name. Any local or taxi driver will know where it is. Slightly further up, there is also the Yingbin Plaza (迎宾广场 Yíng-Bīn-Guǎng-Chǎng) on the right which has a McDonalds on the ground floor and a KFC right above it. More of the shops here are fashion wear based.

    Lotus Road (莲花路 Lián-Huā-Lù) is a walking street, meaning a pedestrians only street. It is parallel to Yingbin Road mentioned above and a block east of it. At the South end, it starts on the West side of the bus station, opposite the Northeast exit from the underground complex at the Macau border. The merchandise available here is similar to what you find in the underground shopping mall, mostly clothing and electronics. There is also a Bank Of China branch here with ATMs for foreign cards. In the middle stretch, there are many bar booths right out on the street with a few stools on each of the four sides. Drinks are cheap (10-15 for beer or coffee), and casual approaches by prostitutes are common.

    On the other side of the bus station is a street with a few restaurants including a good Thai one (look for elephants on the sign), hotels and shops. Follow it a few blocks and it turns into Bar Street; see the Drink section.

[edit] Jida

The main drag in Jida is Jǐngshān Road (景山路) which has a large shopping area covered by two blocks of classy department stores:


    Zhu Hai Shopping Mall (珠海百货 Zhū-Hǎi-Bǎi-Huò)
    Duty Free Shopping Mall (免税商场 Miǎn-Shuì-Shāng-Chǎng)
    Your Family Store (又一家 Yòu-Yī-Jiā)
    Tong Luo Wan Shopping Mall (铜锣湾 Tóng-Luó-Wān)

From Gongbei, take a number 2 bus.

[edit] Xiangzhou

Jusco department storeJusco department store

Xiangzhou has plenty of shops, and is generally less tourist-oriented than Jida or Gongbei. The main street has the Japanese department store Jusco and a number of other shops including several fairly large shopping complexes along the street North of Jusco. There is a nice T-shirt shop, much better than the usual tourist trash, about 20 meters from Jusco. From the border, take a number 2 or Sightseeing bus to reach this area.

On the second corner South of Jusco (bus-stop: Wanzai Sha)are two large buildings full of computer and electronics shops.

[edit] Golf equipment

Golf equipment is readily available and cheap in Zhuhai, but nearly all "brand name" clubs are bogus and often of poor quality as well. There are several small golf shops in the underground shopping center at the border, some on Lotus Road, and two larger ones across the road from the driving range.

[edit] Eat

This guide uses the following price ranges for a typical meal for one, including soft drink: Budget Under 20 RMB Mid-range 20-80 RMB Splurge Over 80RMB

Cantonese cuisine is commonplace. Seafood is a local specialty.

One large and popular high-end seafood place is on a boat in Xiangzhou harbour. From Gongbei, take #9 or Sightseeing bus along Lover's Road until you see an island and bridge on your right, just as the bus turns left. Get off and walk across the bridge. From Jusco, walk South on the main street to the first corner and turn left. The bridge is one block in front.

Shi Shen Seafood City has two locations, one in a interesting old building a bit North of town on the coast road (#3, #10 or Sightseeing bus) and one near the border, a short distance along the road by the clock tower.

Food from other regions of China is also available. Hunan and Sichuan food is common, one well-known Hunan place is Huo Gong Dian in Gongbei.

Walking North from Jusco on the main street, there are many restaurants:


    Turn right at the first corner (KFC) for a big seafood place and a good Sichuan place

    At the seafood place, turn left, and 20 meters along the side street is an alley on your right with assorted cheap plain restaurants

    At the end of the alley, turn left for more of the same including good Muslim noodles about half a block along on your right

    Back on the main street, turn left at first pedestrian overpass for good Dong Bei (Northeast China) food

There is a fine Xinjiang place on the #4 bus route, one stop North of the Jida ferry port. That is part of a cluster of mid-range restaurants in a newly developed area.

For a cheap and filling snack, look for the tiny noodle places run by Muslims.


    May Flower Restaurant, Huang Chao Wu Yue Hua, +867563330000. Offers excellent seafood. As in many places in this area, you pick your fish from tanks, together with any vegetables or other foods you would like and then specify the cooking methods. This is not the kind of place to come if you like to pick things off a menu, but if you're willing to pick out your food while it's still swimming, it's a great meal. There is a large airplane attached to the front of the building and rumors that you can eat in the airplane.

[edit] Non-Chinese food

There are two pizza places run by foreign residents, both good:


    Dynamics Pizza [7] is in Xiangzhou, set back from the street on the main street a couple of blocks North of Jusco, opposite the Post Office. Prices are reasonable, ¥8-10 for beer and ¥15 to 50-odd for pizza. Owner is a south African called Peter. Very nice guy! Tuesday night informal "quiz nites."

    Mr Pizza is in Jinding (#3, #10 or Sightseeing bus to first bus stop after you turn into Jinding, then cross the street).

There are also several Pizza Huts, but Dynamics or Mr Pizza are both much better and considerably cheaper. There is also a local chain called Pizza Coffee, with reasonable prices but without pizza that appeals to Western tastes.

Good, but relatively expensive places:


    Indian Kitchen, Jida - #4 bus, 2 stops south of the port

    Roman restaurant, Jida, Texan chef, 100 RMB steak or 50 RMB burritos, good 68 RMB dinner buffet - #4 or Sightseeing bus, look for the airplane on a stand in front of a shopping center near the beach. Owner and his daughter both speak excellent English, most staff have some English. Wednesday nights foreigners get a discount on beer.

    Holiday Inn in Jida does an excellent breakfast buffet with Western, Japanese and Chinese dishes, 60 RMB if you aren't staying there.

    Alain's Belgian Beer Bar in Jida has good food, generally large portions and a fine selection of bottled beers.

The Thai restaurant on the lower floor of the border shopping area and the one down the street from the clock tower are both good, and reasonably priced. There are several other Thai places around town, and a Korean one in Jida.

There are several Japanese restaurants in town.


    Jusco has good sushi on the third floor.

    There is a large upscale Japanese restaurant on Lovers' Road in Gongbei, a block from Bar Street.

    Takumi Ken, on the #4 bus route, one stop South of the port.

    Indian Restaurant in Gongbei. Do not expect this restaurant to serve curries — they mean "Indian" as in Native American. The specialty is tolerable steak at high prices. However, you might consider going for the decor, which is American Plains Indian with a few pieces of Northwest Coast art. The waitresses there wear fringed skirts with feathers in their hair. The restaurant is a couple of blocks North of McDonalds on the main street from the West end of the border shopping area.

    The Bali restaurant, in Jida, near the driving range, on the #9 route - looks Indonesian, but the menu had only Chinese and some Western dishes. Perhaps in the evening they fire up the barbecues outside and try to live up to their name.

    To shop for imported groceries, try Jusco on the main street in Xiangzhou, or Carrefour out near the end of the #7 and #9 bus lines, or the Zhuhai Deli [8]. Jusco has a reasonable bakery, albeit with a few odd items like tuna doughnuts.

[edit] Drink

There are many bars on "bar street" (jiuba jie) one block inland, a 20 minute walk from the Gongbei border; just follow the street with the clock tower on it until it becomes bar street. Some, particularly Cohiba, are expat hangouts. These are generally expensive (¥20 to ¥30 for beer), but may be worthwhile if you crave Western food or live music.

For a unique experience, have a beer or coffee at one of the dozen open-air bar booths along Lianhua Road. There are two groups of bars with the one nearer the border emphasizing food and the one further along emphasizing drinking. Drinks are cheap (¥10 or ¥15 for a bottle of beer or cup of coffee), and you get to meet all sorts of travellers, expats, local wannabes and working girls. Hanging out here is one of the most relaxing things to do in Gongbei. Be cautious though, especially late at night. Most stalls are open till 3am.

There used to be tiny outdoor bars in front of the Jusco store in Xiangzhou. These have closed, but walk through Jusco, turn left and across the road you'll find Ryan's Bar -popular with expats especially when international sporting events are on TV.

[edit] Sleep

[edit] Gongbei

There are at least a dozen hotels within walking distance of the Gongbei border, mostly either cheap or mid-range (¥170 to ¥400). You can bargain the prices and normally they have "special prices", around half the listed price. On the other hand, it is not uncommon to see a low price on the sign, but find when you go in that only more expensive rooms are available.


    Friendship Hotel, opposite the Gongbei border. If you are at the border, facing town, it is to the left of the bus station. Directly across the street as you emerge from the Northeast exit of the underground complex.

    Taking Yingbin Road North from the border, turn left at the first street for two fairly large mid-range hotels. Or turn right at McDonalds for several more including some fancier ones.

    Jiuzhou Hotel, find the road that goes North along the East side of the bus station. Hotel about a half block along it on the right. The sign in the window says ¥120.

    In the middle of the walking street bar area is Da Hai Hotel with clean rooms, television, air-conditioning, at ¥130 a night. Some rooms even have bathtubs, unusual in China. On the left, toward the North end of the bar strip. This is a great place to stay, provided you don't mind a few flghts of stairs, music from nearby bars audible until the wee hours, or that some rooms are rented by the hour.

    There are several other hotels along the same street.

    There are cheaper options available. On the walking street there are at least three massage parlours. If you arrive after 9pm you may pay ¥60 to ¥88 (depending on the room type) for 2 hours traditional Chinese massage and they will let you sleep until midday without additional payment. In one establishment you have the room to yourself, it has television and air-conditioning, in others you share a room with 4 other guests.

[edit] Xiangzhou


    If you turn left (South) on the main street as you come out of Jusco, there are three hotels in the first block. Two large ones on your right (across the street) and a small one a block along on your left, ¥80. Several more are on various back streets North of Jusco, in the ¥100-¥120 range.

    Touts outside the Xiangzhou bus station offer accommodation, often in private apartments with the family on bunk beds in the living room so the bedrooms can earn money. ¥50 a night is usual. These are usually clean and have a TV in every room, but up several flights of stairs and with a squat toilet.

[edit] Budget


    There is a HI youth hostel in Zhuhai which is located in the "Zhuhai Holiday Resort". This is in Jida, on number 4 bus route.

[edit] Mid range

[edit] Splurge


    Grand Bay View Hotel, Gongbei - nice views

    Harbour View hotel, Jida - located next to the only decent beach in downtown Zhuhai. About 1K from the ferry terminal. Good restaurant too.

    Zobon Business Hotel, Jida - 100 metres from Harbour View. negotiate a price here (try around RMB450) for a really good environment (5-star) and a western restaurant.

    Holiday Inn (假日酒店 Jià-Rì-Jiǔ-Diàn), Jida - international, western managed, clean rooms, within walking distance to shopping area. For American travelers, this is a high-end Holiday Inn, not the budget chain that is found in the US. The rooms are large if somewhat worn, and on the executive floors laundry, internet, local calls and breakfast are free making it quite attractive for business travelers. Many business traveller's staying at this hotel are part of large multinational electronic and clothing manufacturing companies close by. This hotel is frequented by business travelers from the Silicon Valley area of California. Nightly live music is available in the downstairs bar. Floors two and three are owned by a separate Macao company and offer massage, a large bar, karaoke and other entertainments. +86 (756)3228888. No. 188 Jingshan Road.

    Nanyang Seascape (南洋海景 Nán-Yáng-Hǎi-Jǐng), Gongbei - has beds like rock, smelly lobby and lifts, the location is good though.

    Yindo (银都 Yín-Dū), Gongbei - the first 5-star hotel in Zhuhai but it's too old. Feels more like a 3.5 star.

    Zhuhai Holiday Resort Hotel, Gongbei - 5-star hotel but by Western standards closer to 3 or 4. 5 minutes from ferry terminal.

[edit] Contact

The area code for Zhuhai is 0756. When calling from overseas, dial +86 756 XXXX-XXXX

[edit] Tourist Trap

In general, Zhuhai is a safe and friendly family oriented city; however, as a tourist or business traveler, you will want to take the usual precautions (pick pockets) while in the crowded shopping areas.

Some tour guides will take you to a Chinese medicine company called Bai Chao Tang (百草堂). They tell you it is compulsory to visit that place because it is a government appointed 'tourism site'. There are some 'doctor' or 'professors' in there who will listen to your pulse and prescribe some very expensive chinese herbs for you. There's probably nothing wrong with the herbs, just that you can get them at a much cheaper price outside.

Also beware of changing foreign money into RMB in the underground shopping mall at Gongbei. Several shops may give you fake money.

[edit] Get out

Zhuhai has several islands, accessible by ferry. Some have uncrowded beaches. From the Xiangzhou Northern Wharf (香洲北堤码头), you can get to the Wanshan Islands (万山群岛).

One of the biggest Chinese antique furniture market areas is a 30 minute drive away in Guhe, Zhongshan. You can take a taxi (¥30-¥50) or get a bus near the border (¥2-¥4) to get there.

The bus to Guangzhou costs ¥60 or ¥65, runs every half hour, trip takes 2.5 hours. You can board at either the underground station in Gongbei to get to Garden Hotel (花园酒店), or from near the Gongbei border to get to the Provincial bus station (省汽车站) or Tianhe Dasha (天河大厦) bus station.

There are also buses to most nearby cities, including Shenzhen (cheaper than the ferry), and overnight buses to Guilin, Xiamen, Zhanjiang and Beihai.

The Xiangzhou bus station has a direct overnight bus to Yangshuo which is cheap (¥110) but fairly uncomfortable. Unlike most overnight busses it has no on-board toilets but it makes several stops during the 12 hour trip.

Neighbouring Macau can be reached on foot or by car through the Gongbei border crossing, by ferry from Wanzai area, or on foot or by car through the Lotus Bridge from Hengqin.

This is a usable article. It has information for getting in as well as some complete entries for restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please plunge forward and help it grow!


Top | Arts | Business | Computers | Games | Health | Kids | News | Recreation | Reference | Regional | Science | Shopping | Society | Sports | World | Regional | Languages | News | Blogs
brujula .net

toolbar
referir por email
agregar a favorito
traducir a EN IT FR GE PF CN JA KO RU AR
digg delicious stumble gbook reddit
Texto + grande + chico
Plunge forward!

Zhuhai

From Wikitravel

Asia : East Asia : China : South East : Guangdong : Zhuhai Jump to: navigation, search
Contents

Zhuhai (珠海 Zhū-Hǎi) [1] is a city in Guangdong province, China. By land, Zhuhai is connected to the former Portuguese colony Macau to the south, while former British colony Hong Kong lies across the sea to the east. The provincial capital Guangzhou is about 150km to the north.

Zhuhai means Pearl Sea; this is where the Pearl River (珠江 Zhū-Jiāng) flows into the South Sea (南海 Nán-Hǎi).

Lovers' Road, Gongbei, with Jida in the distance Lovers' Road, Gongbei, with Jida in the distance Guangdong province, China; Green star is Zhuhai Guangdong province, China; Green star is Zhuhai

[edit] Understand

[edit] History

The Zhuhai area has been inhabited for thousands of years. Until the 1970s, Zhuhai was a group of fishing villages with a population of 100,000 or so. Since 1980, when it was designated a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) by the central government, it has expanded to include nearby areas and is now a modern city with well over a million inhabitants.

[edit] Economy

Economically, it is one of the fastest growing cities in China due to its SEZ status, superb location at the Pearl River Delta and close proximity to Asia's economic powerhouse Hong Kong as well as Macau where most of the investments are pouring in from. However, it is still lagging behind neighbouring cities like Shenzhen and Dongguan.

[edit] Ecology

Zhuhai is one of China's cleanest and prettiest cities, and received numerous accolades for its excellent ecological development effort. In 1998, it was given the International Award for Best Practices in Improving Living Environment by the United Nations Center for Human Settlements. It is also commonly agreed to be one of the best cities in China to retire in.

[edit] Climate

The weather in Zhuhai is sub-tropical. Temperature varies between 10C/50F degrees in winter (Dec to Feb) to a hot and humid 35C/95F degrees in summer (Jun to Sep). Typhoons are also a possibility in summer. The best times to visit are spring and fall.

[edit] Legend

Fisher Girl Statue, symbol of Zhuhai Fisher Girl Statue, symbol of Zhuhai

Legend has it that an angel descended to earth one day and fell in love with the beauty of the land. Reluctant to return, she turned herself into a fisher girl, weaving nets and searching for precious pearls to earn a living. In addition, she unselfishly used her knowledge and powers to heal villagers who were ill, and so she was well loved by one and all. Soon she met a young fisherman named Hai Peng and they fell in love. Not long after, however, Hai Peng listened to malicious accusations and demanded the fisher girl to give him her magical bracelets as a token of her affection. The fisher girl tearfully explained the origin of the bracelets. While she was still the daughter of the South Sea Dragon King, the eight bracelets were given to her by the eight palace mistresses, to guard her against the thought of abandoning immortality. She would die if she even removed one. Tragically, Hai Peng did not believe her story and turned to leave. The fisher girl, to prove her love for Hai Peng, removed her bracelets and died in his arms instantly. Hai Peng was filled with remorse and grief. His great sorrow moved the Jiu Zhou Huan Elder, who taught him the way to bring the fisher girl back to life. For this he had to go to the Jiu Zhou Island to find the Resurrection Grass, which must then be fed with man's blood. After much difficulty, Hai Peng found the grass and grew it with his own blood. Days turned to years, and the grass was finally ready and used to revive the fisher girl. Henceforth, the fisher girl became a true mortal. On the day of their wedding, all the girls together found a gigantic, magical pearl at the seashore. In gratitude, the fisher girl presented this to the reverent Elder.


    Fisher girl: 渔女
    Hai Peng: 海鹏
    Dragon King of the South Seas: 南海龙王
    Jiu Zhou Huan Elder: 九州环长老
    Resurrection Grass: 还魂草

[edit] Districts

From North to South:


    Jinding (金鼎 Jīn-Dǐng) - a village whose main attraction is an excellent Pizza place run by an Englishman - reached via 3, 10 or sightseeing bus.

    Tangjiawan (唐家湾 Táng-Jiā-Wān) - a moderate size town with good street food late at night.

    Xiangzhou (香洲 Xiāng-Zhōu) - government offices, several big department stores, some bars and restaurants; residential districts are where the locals mainly go shopping.

    Jida (吉大 Jí-Dà ) - has lots of offices, high end hotels and shopping complexes.

    Gongbei (拱北 Gǒng-Běi) - the main tourist area with cheap hotels, lots of cheap clothing, electronics, souvenirs, walking street (步行街 Bù-Xíng-Jiē) and bar street (酒吧街 Jiǔ-Bā-Jiē), and at the southern edge an underground shopping center and the Macau border.

    Wanzai (湾仔) - has a ferry station to Macau and a seafood street.

    Doumen (斗门 Dǒu-Mén) - in the West; the local airport is here, also hot spring areas.

The city itself is Gongbei, Jida and Xiangzhou. The other districts are suburbs within the Zhuhai Special Economic Zone.

[edit] Get in

VISA

A visa is required to enter China. For most passports, it can be applied for in Hong Kong or Macau, and takes only 1 day. Alternatively, have it done at the Chinese Embassy in your home country. The only exception is for visitors from Singapore, Brunei and Japan, who can enter China without a visa and stay for up to 15 days.

[edit] By plane

Zhuhai Airport (IATA: ZUH) [2], a moderately sized modern airport, connects the area with many Chinese cities, but not many international destinations. It is located West of downtown in the Doumen district. Budget carrier Spring Airlines [3] flies here daily from Shanghai.

To reach Zhuhai from outside China, fly to Hong Kong, Macau or Guangzhou. All have large modern airports with many international connections and all are within an hour or two of Zhuhai.

From the Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport (IATA: CAN) [4], an express bus service that goes to Zhuhai is available. Costs ¥90 and takes approximately 2.5 hours.

From the Macau International Airport (IATA: MFM) [5], the best way to get to Zhuhai is via the Express Link service, skipping the Macau immigration and customs altogether. Once you get off your flight, instead of going through immigration, look for the Express Link (China) sign and follow it. This will lead you past a transit security scan station where you must pick up an Express Link card, and upstairs into the departure hall. Go to the ticket counter at Gate 8, present your card and buy a ticket for the coach that goes to the Gongbei border (past Macau, before Zhuhai). The coach fare is ¥52 and the ride takes only 15 minutes.


    Coach departure times are 1100h 1130h 1200h 1230h 1300h 1445h 1700h 1730h 1800h and 1845h.

    If you need to check in any bags for your flight, remember to have them "blue tagged" during your flight check-in for this Express Link service. The blue tag is not a necessity, merely a convenience. Present your luggage tags at the coach ticket counter and pick up your bags at the bus bay later.

    The option to skip the Macau immigration is not available on the return. Allocate *lots* of time for immigration for the trip back, especially at the China end on a weekend, which can easily take more than an hour unless you have access to the Diplomat queue. Starting off at the Zhuhai border 3 hours before your flight departure time would be a good idea. Anything less is a big risk. Once out of the China customs (before entering Macau), there is a little ticket booth to the left where you can get a shuttle bus ticket to the airport for ¥35. The buses will be waiting on the left once you leave the Macau immigration hall. They run at 10 minute intervals.

From Hong Kong International Airport (IATA: HKG) [6], one option is to take the Airport Express to the Kowloon station (at the cost of 90 HKD), then hop on the free Airport Express transit bus K2 to the China-Hong Kong Ferry Terminal (s:中港城码头 t:中港城碼頭) and finally take a ferry to Zhuhai. See below for ferry timetable.

Another option is to catch a ferry from the HKIA Skypier directly to Macau and cross into Zhuhai via the Gongbei border gate. Immigration and custom procedures can be skipped at the Hong Kong end. Full instructions can be found at here. The ferry journey takes about 50 mins and runs hourly (usually).

A third option from HKIA is now available in the form of long-distance buses that go overland to Gongbei. The journey takes 3.5 hours and costs 200HKD. Departure times are 0700h 0800h 1400h 1500h 1700h and 1900h.

Just introduced is a ferry service (twice daily for now) that brings travellers directly from HKIA to the Jiuzhou Port in Zhuhai. The ferry leaves at 1115h and 1700h. The one from Zhuhai to HKIA leaves at 0930h and 1530h. The trip takes approximately 50 minutes.

[edit] By boat

From Hong Kong

Ferry Timetable Hong Kong - Zhuhai (Departing from)


Top | Arts | Business | Computers | Games | Health | Kids | News | Recreation | Reference | Regional | Science | Shopping | Society | Sports | World | Languages | News Blogs

Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor


Your Ad Here



BA.net Brujula.Net © 2008 advertising

english español italiano germany japan france more bookmark
>