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(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Tianjin:
Origin of name - "heaven" and "river ford" = "emperor's ford"

Population (2004) 10,240,000

Tianjin is one of the four municipalities of China that are directly under the central government and have provincial-level status. Its urban area is the third largest in China, after Shanghai and Beijing.

Tianjin's urban area is located along the Hai He River. Its ports, some distance away, are located on Bohai Gulf in the Pacific Ocean. Tianjin Municipality borders Hebei province to the north, south, and west; the municipality of Beijing is to the northwest, and Bohai Gulf to the east.

One of the joys of my job in a university is meeting so many brilliant and charming overseas students. One of them, a Chinese lady from Tianjin, emailed me while I was in Beijing to ask if I'd like to catch up- and perhaps to show her what little I knew of Beijing. She was to be my guest. Then, in the best tradition of Chinese hospitality, she proposed that the next day I should go to Tianjin as her guest. We even went to Beijing Railway to rehearse my departure as well as see her off.

One travel tip that did not emerge until I attempted the return to my hotel was that one does not take a cab from the rank opposite the station. Every driver, it seems, is waiting to fleece a foreigner. One has to walk at least a block to hail a passing cab driver who agrees to turn his meter on and follow directions.

So I got up on time, made it to Beijings awesome railway station, had one tiny problem finding the right gate - solved by a uniformed official who spoke English - found my train, my carriage and my seat. China's trains are clean, fast and comfortable. According to the digital display in my carriage we reached 167 kph on our way to Tianjin and it is government policy to upgrade the tracks until 200 kph is possible.

My friend met the train and thereafter wouldn't let me pay for anything. It was a delight to see her again and discover her life since graduating from my university. Because she needed to visit her local branch of the Bank of China my first impression of Tianjin was of the commercial area - which reminded me a lot of the Bund in Shanghai - elegant and well preserved buildings in a distinctly 19th Century British style. Tianjin is a museum of European architecture.

My second impression was that it did not seem to be the least crowded, or especially polluted.

I committed my first faux pas when I attempted to photograph the Olympic mascots in the Bank and the guard freaked out. My friend asked me to wait outside. The Bank of China is responsible for selling the games tickets. Then my friend shouted me an excellent meal in a very posh restaurant. Next it was off to Guwenhua Jie, the Ancient Culture Street.

I did find this interesting, as my friend expected. The trouble was this is a tourist attraction and on this day tourists were thin on the ground. I felt like the only girl in the harem. Notwithstanding Guwenhua Jie is definitely worth seeing - an odd mixture of genuine culture and strictly commercial (sometimes in the same shop!).

We went to Starbucks to relieve my caffeine addiction and then took a taxi to the station. That's when I made my second faux pas. As soon as we stepped out of the cab and started the 30 yards to the ticket office a man and a woman started yelling at my friend and me that we should pay 30+ rmb for me to ride to Beijing in his car. I would have to be insane to give up a safe, comfortable train seat for a ride with a carload of strangers.

There was no way but they wouldn't give up, not for a second. By the time we reached the ticket office I lost it and yelled SHUT UP!. . . Everything stopped, as though a bomb had gone off. Then my friend hurriedly intervened to assure everyone I was just a dumb foreigner who meant no harm. For me the lesson was that I have absolutely no idea how it feels to be so desperately poor in a country with no social safety net.

We waited for my train in a little cafe where even a pot of tea seemed to stretch their resouces. We watched a slideshow of my friends beautiful photos from her European holidays on her laptop. Gradually both the staff and the clients began to drift past to sneak a look at the new Chinese woman, her computer, her photographs and her foreign friend.

 

There are four million cars in Beijing. Imagine how many bicycles there are!

Beijing Railway Station where you must not catch a cab because they will think you are a tourist.
The main entrance hall. Now you must find the right waiting room.
Here it is - Tianjin is a popular destination.
You go in here... And you come out here. Where my friend Sunny was waiting for me.
I like Tianjin's buildings - maybe they refer to a prosperous past like the Bund in Shanghai But they can e a nice eccentricityy about them too.
I gather there is a heritage consciousness too, which was sadly lacking in Shanghai A giant speaker box?

Here comes the ancient culture street - crowds were thin and vendors desperate.

 
 
 
    Sunny bought a comb in here.
The way to a most wonderful restaurant In the lobby of the hotel/restaurant was this snap of Ho Chi Min with Chou En Lai. Apparently Jiang Zemin visited this restaurant to sample its famous baozi
A reminder that you get you games tickets at the Bank of China. Outside the Bank of China Wedding couple posing for their photographer in a Tianjin street.
A statue of Yan Fu (1854-1921), a Chinese scholar and translator, most famous for introducing Western thoughts, including Darwin's idea of "natural selection," into China during the late 19th century.
Preservation of Tianjin's historic buildings.  
Traditional opera without costume but with orchestra. The singer takes the female parts falsetto.   Haguan Hutong - has a distinctly different character from Beijing hutong.
Sunny and her sister share an apartment in this block.   No Photos!...well I could have been a terrorist or a bankrobber.
No discount, i.e. no haggling - excuse me, are we still in China? Disney in China - or the Surrealists? A music university opposite Sunny's apartment.
Allegedly this is a classic Chinese commercial street, Souvenir stand Bank of China

 

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