ROUTE 504

South China Coastal Odyssey — 12 Days / 11 Nights

华南海岸之旅

🗓️ 12 Days / 11 Nights

Journey through the heart of China from Guangzhou to Shanghai, traversing 6 cities across 12 days. Each stop reveals another facet of a civilization five millennia deep — ancient walls, sacred temples, misty mountains, and bustling markets where tradition and modernity flow together like the rivers that shaped this land.

Guangzhou (2) Shenzhen (1) Hong Kong (2) Macau (1) Xiamen (2) Shanghai (3)
504
Route 504
Scroll for details

📅 Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1
Arrival in Guangzhou
Guangzhou · 广州 · Capital of Cantonese Civilization
Chen Clan Ancestral Hall 陈家祠
Built in 1894 by 72 Chen clan branches, this is the finest surviving example of Lingnan (Southern Chinese) architecture. Every surface — roof ridges, gable walls, columns, doors — is covered with ceramic sculpture, brick carving, iron casting, woodwork, and stone relief. The nine halls and six courtyards house the Guangdong Folk Art Museum.
Canton Tower 广州塔
At 604 metres, the hyperboloid tower — nicknamed 'Super Waist' for its sinuous figure — is the tallest structure in Guangzhou. The observation deck at 488 metres offers 360° views of the Pearl River Delta megacity. The world's highest outdoor sky drop and a revolving restaurant at the top make it an engineering and entertainment spectacle.
Shamian Island 沙面岛
A 300-metre-wide sandbank in the Pearl River that served as the Anglo-French concession from 1861 to 1943. Its 150 colonial buildings — Baroque banks, Gothic churches, Art Deco apartments — line bougainvillea-draped boulevards beneath century-old banyan trees. The island is Guangzhou's most atmospheric neighborhood.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Cantonese Dim Sum (广式点心) — Guangzhou invented dim sum — the art of 'touching the heart' with small dishes served from bamboo steamers. The city's teahouses serve har gow (crystal shrimp dumplings), char siu bao, cheung fun, and over 200 other varieties. Yum cha (drinking tea with dim sum) is Guangzhou's defining social ritual.
🎨 Artifact: Cantonese Ivory Carving (广州牙雕) — For 2,000 years, Guangzhou's ivory carvers produced the most intricate work in the world — concentric puzzle balls with up to 57 freely rotating layers carved from a single tusk. The skill survives using legal mammoth ivory and synthetic materials. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
🎵 Music: Cantonese Opera (Yueju) (粤剧) — A 600-year-old tradition combining martial arts, acrobatics, and elaborate costumes with Cantonese dialect singing. The painted faces, embroidered robes, and percussive orchestras create one of China's most visually and aurally dramatic art forms. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
Day 2
From Guangzhou to Shenzhen
Guangzhou · 广州 · Capital of Cantonese Civilization
Chen Clan Ancestral Hall 陈家祠
Built in 1894 by 72 Chen clan branches, this is the finest surviving example of Lingnan (Southern Chinese) architecture. Every surface — roof ridges, gable walls, columns, doors — is covered with ceramic sculpture, brick carving, iron casting, woodwork, and stone relief. The nine halls and six courtyards house the Guangdong Folk Art Museum.
Canton Tower 广州塔
At 604 metres, the hyperboloid tower — nicknamed 'Super Waist' for its sinuous figure — is the tallest structure in Guangzhou. The observation deck at 488 metres offers 360° views of the Pearl River Delta megacity. The world's highest outdoor sky drop and a revolving restaurant at the top make it an engineering and entertainment spectacle.
Shamian Island 沙面岛
A 300-metre-wide sandbank in the Pearl River that served as the Anglo-French concession from 1861 to 1943. Its 150 colonial buildings — Baroque banks, Gothic churches, Art Deco apartments — line bougainvillea-draped boulevards beneath century-old banyan trees. The island is Guangzhou's most atmospheric neighborhood.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: White-Cut Chicken (白切鸡) — The Cantonese benchmark for chicken cookery: a whole chicken poached at precisely 75°C until the skin turns golden-silky and the flesh is just cooked through, served with ginger-scallion oil and a soy dip. The dish's simplicity demands the finest free-range Qingyuan chickens and flawless technique.
🎨 Artifact: Guangcai Porcelain (广彩瓷器) — Overglaze enamel porcelain decorated in Guangzhou for export to Europe since the 18th century. The dense, colorful designs — gold, rose-pink, turquoise, and emerald on white — adorned the tables of European aristocracy and sparked the global Chinoiserie fashion.
🎵 Music: Guangdong Music (Yinyue) (广东音乐) — Ensemble music using the gaohu (high-pitched erhu), yangqin (dulcimer), and qinqin (plucked lute). Light, cheerful, and highly ornamented, it is the musical embodiment of Cantonese culture — sophisticated yet accessible, refined yet never pretentious.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
G6201 InUse 12:30 lunch, then Train G6201 at 14:00 14:35 Shenzhen
Day 3
From Shenzhen to Hong Kong
Shenzhen · 深圳 · China's Silicon Valley
Huaqiangbei Electronics Market 华强北电子市场
The world's largest electronics marketplace: a dozen multi-story malls containing over 20,000 stalls selling every electronic component imaginable — from smartphone parts to drones, LED panels to AI chips. This is the engine room of global hardware innovation, where ideas go from concept to prototype in 48 hours.
OCT Loft Creative Culture Park 华侨城创意文化园
A converted industrial complex that is Shenzhen's answer to Beijing's 798 Art District. Design studios, independent galleries, craft breweries, and avant-garde architecture firms occupy former warehouses. The park hosts China's most cutting-edge design biennale.
Dapeng Fortress 大鹏所城
A 600-year-old Ming dynasty coastal fortress, incongruously preserved amid Shenzhen's hyper-modernity. Built in 1394 to defend against Japanese pirates, its 10-metre walls enclose a village of 270 historic buildings — the only surviving reminder that before the skyscrapers, this coast was a frontier of imperial military strategy.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Cantonese Seafood (广式海鲜) — Shenzhen's coastline yields the freshest seafood in the Pearl River Delta: steamed mantis shrimp, salt-and-pepper soft-shell crab, and whole steamed grouper with ginger and scallion. The Shekou fish market — where you select live seafood and have it cooked at adjacent restaurants — is the city's most authentic dining experience.
🎨 Artifact: Maker Culture Hardware (创客文化硬件) — Shenzhen's maker movement has turned hardware prototyping into a folk art. The city's 'shanzhai' (copycat) culture — once derided — has evolved into genuine grassroots innovation, producing original products from open-source designs at a speed no other city can match.
🎵 Music: Shenzhen Jazz Festival (深圳爵士音乐节) — OCT Loft hosts one of Asia's premier jazz festivals annually, reflecting the city's cosmopolitan aspirations. International and Chinese jazz artists perform in the industrial-chic spaces of the creative park.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
G6501 InUse 12:30 lunch, then Train G6501 at 14:00 14:20 Hong Kong
Day 4
Discovering Hong Kong
Hong Kong · 香港 · Where East Meets West
Victoria Peak 太平山顶
The 552-metre summit offers the defining panorama of Hong Kong: a forest of glass towers climbing the slopes of Hong Kong Island, Victoria Harbour glittering below, and the Kowloon Peninsula stretching to the misty hills of the New Territories. The Peak Tram — Asia's first funicular, operating since 1888 — ascends at a vertiginous 27° gradient.
Victoria Harbour & Star Ferry 维多利亚港·天星小轮
The Star Ferry has crossed Victoria Harbour since 1888 — an eight-minute voyage that National Geographic named one of the world's great scenic journeys. The harbour skyline, illuminated nightly by the Symphony of Lights laser show, is the most photographed urban waterfront in Asia.
Temple Street Night Market 庙街夜市
Named for the Tin Hau Temple at its center, this Kowloon night market stretches for six blocks with hundreds of stalls selling jade, electronics, silk, and street food. Cantonese opera singers perform on improvised stages while fortune tellers read palms and faces by candlelight.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Dim Sum (点心) — The Cantonese art of 'touching the heart' — bamboo steamers of har gow (crystal shrimp dumplings), siu mai (pork-shrimp dumplings), char siu bao (barbecue pork buns), and cheung fun (rice noodle rolls). In Hong Kong, dim sum is not just food — it is the social fabric of the city, the yum cha ritual that binds families across generations.
🎨 Artifact: Jade Market Heritage (玉器市场) — The Yau Ma Tei Jade Market has traded raw and carved jade since the 1950s, continuing a Cantonese tradition stretching back millennia. Over 400 stalls offer everything from rough nephrite boulders to intricately carved jadeite pendants, bangles, and figurines.
🎵 Music: Cantopop (粤语流行曲) — Born in the 1970s, Cantopop fused Western pop melodies with Cantonese lyrics to create Asia's most influential popular music. Icons like Sam Hui, Anita Mui, and Leslie Cheung defined a generation. The genre was Hong Kong's greatest cultural export before cinema.
Day 5
From Hong Kong to Macau
Hong Kong · 香港 · Where East Meets West
Victoria Peak 太平山顶
The 552-metre summit offers the defining panorama of Hong Kong: a forest of glass towers climbing the slopes of Hong Kong Island, Victoria Harbour glittering below, and the Kowloon Peninsula stretching to the misty hills of the New Territories. The Peak Tram — Asia's first funicular, operating since 1888 — ascends at a vertiginous 27° gradient.
Victoria Harbour & Star Ferry 维多利亚港·天星小轮
The Star Ferry has crossed Victoria Harbour since 1888 — an eight-minute voyage that National Geographic named one of the world's great scenic journeys. The harbour skyline, illuminated nightly by the Symphony of Lights laser show, is the most photographed urban waterfront in Asia.
Temple Street Night Market 庙街夜市
Named for the Tin Hau Temple at its center, this Kowloon night market stretches for six blocks with hundreds of stalls selling jade, electronics, silk, and street food. Cantonese opera singers perform on improvised stages while fortune tellers read palms and faces by candlelight.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Roast Goose (烧鹅) — Hong Kong's answer to Peking duck: whole goose marinated in five-spice, star anise, and fermented bean curd, then roasted in a charcoal oven until the skin is lacquer-crisp and the meat falls from the bone. Yung Kee Restaurant on Wellington Street has been carving it since 1942.
🎨 Artifact: Cantonese Porcelain (Guangcai) (广彩) — Ornate overglaze enamel porcelain produced in Guangdong since the Qing dynasty — riot of gold, rose, and turquoise on white. Originally made for European export markets, the surviving workshops in Hong Kong represent the last practitioners of this 300-year-old tradition.
🎵 Music: Cantonese Opera (粤剧) — A 600-year-old opera tradition combining martial arts, acrobatics, and elaborate costumes with Cantonese dialect singing. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2009. Performances at the Sunbeam Theatre and on temporary bamboo stages during festivals preserve the art form.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
12:30 lunch, then Scenic drive departing 14:00 15:00 Macau
Day 6
From Macau to Xiamen
Macau · 澳门 · Where Portugal Meets the Pearl River
Ruins of St. Paul's 大三巴牌坊
The ornate stone facade of a Jesuit church completed in 1640 by Japanese Christian exiles and Chinese craftsmen — the greatest monument to the fusion of European and Asian art. The carvings blend the Madonna with peonies, angels with chrysanthemums, and Portuguese coats of arms with Chinese guardian lions.
Senado Square 议事亭前地
A wave-patterned Portuguese limestone plaza surrounded by pastel-painted neoclassical buildings — the heart of Macau's UNESCO Historic Centre. The Leal Senado (Loyal Senate) building dates to 1784. The square feels transplanted from Lisbon, yet the incense from A-Ma Temple drifts around the corner.
A-Ma Temple 妈阁庙
Predating Portuguese arrival by at least a century, this temple to the sea goddess Mazu gave Macau its name (A-Ma-Gao, 'Bay of A-Ma'). Pavilions, prayer halls, and incense-blackened caves climb the hillside among ancient banyan trees. It remains the spiritual anchor of Macau's Chinese community.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Portuguese Egg Tart (葡式蛋挞) — Macau's most famous export: a flaky puff pastry shell filled with a caramelized egg custard — inspired by Lisbon's pastéis de nata but adapted with Chinese ingredients. Lord Stow's Bakery in Coloane village has baked them since 1989 and spawned global imitation.
🎨 Artifact: Azulejo Tile Art (葡式花砖) — Portuguese blue-and-white ceramic tiles adorn Macau's churches, government buildings, and streetscapes — a direct transplant of the Iberian decorative tradition. The finest examples at the Guia Chapel (1622) show Biblical scenes rendered in the same cobalt blue as Chinese porcelain.
🎵 Music: Fado in Macau (澳门法多) — Portuguese fado — mournful songs of saudade (longing) — has been performed in Macau since the 16th century. The local tradition incorporates Cantonese instruments and melodies, creating a hybrid 'Macau fado' that exists nowhere else.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
D5374 InUse HU5299 12:30 lunch, then Train D5374 at 14:00 16:15 Xiamen
Day 7
Discovering Xiamen
Xiamen · 厦门 · Garden on the Sea
Gulangyu Island 鼓浪屿
A 1.88-km² island accessible only by ferry, where no cars are permitted and the only sounds are piano music drifting from Victorian villas, birdsong, and the crash of waves. Over 1,000 historic buildings blend colonial European, Hokkien Chinese, and Southeast Asian architectural styles. UNESCO World Heritage since 2017 as an 'Historic International Settlement.'
Nanputuo Temple 南普陀寺
A 1,000-year-old Buddhist temple at the foot of Wulao Peak, famous for its vegetarian cuisine and its role in modern Chinese Buddhist education. The temple complex — pagodas, halls, and rock-carved inscriptions — climbs the hillside, offering views across Xiamen's harbor to Gulangyu Island.
Hulishan Fortress 胡里山炮台
Built in 1891 during the Qing dynasty's belated modernization, this granite fortress houses the world's largest surviving Krupp coastal defense cannon — a 50-tonne German-made weapon that could fire shells 16 km across the Taiwan Strait. The fortress tells the story of China's traumatic encounter with Western military technology.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Satay Noodles (沙茶面) — Xiamen's signature breakfast: alkaline noodles in a rich, spicy-sweet satay broth made from peanuts, coconut, dried shrimp, chili, and lemongrass — a flavor profile that reveals the Hokkien diaspora's deep connection to Southeast Asian cuisine. Topped with tofu, offal, seafood, or duck blood cake.
🎨 Artifact: Gulangyu Piano Heritage (鼓浪屿钢琴文化) — Gulangyu has produced more concert pianists per capita than anywhere in China — earning it the nickname 'Piano Island.' The island's Piano Museum houses 200+ historic pianos from five centuries, including instruments played by Liszt and Chopin. Western missionaries introduced the piano in the 1840s, and Hokkien families embraced it as a mark of cultivation.
🎵 Music: Nanyin (南音) — The oldest surviving Chinese chamber music tradition — 1,000+ years old, preserved by Hokkien communities in Xiamen and across Southeast Asia. UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. Its slow, contemplative melodies and ancient instruments make it the living ancestor of all Chinese classical music.
Day 8
From Xiamen to Shanghai
Xiamen · 厦门 · Garden on the Sea
Gulangyu Island 鼓浪屿
A 1.88-km² island accessible only by ferry, where no cars are permitted and the only sounds are piano music drifting from Victorian villas, birdsong, and the crash of waves. Over 1,000 historic buildings blend colonial European, Hokkien Chinese, and Southeast Asian architectural styles. UNESCO World Heritage since 2017 as an 'Historic International Settlement.'
Nanputuo Temple 南普陀寺
A 1,000-year-old Buddhist temple at the foot of Wulao Peak, famous for its vegetarian cuisine and its role in modern Chinese Buddhist education. The temple complex — pagodas, halls, and rock-carved inscriptions — climbs the hillside, offering views across Xiamen's harbor to Gulangyu Island.
Hulishan Fortress 胡里山炮台
Built in 1891 during the Qing dynasty's belated modernization, this granite fortress houses the world's largest surviving Krupp coastal defense cannon — a 50-tonne German-made weapon that could fire shells 16 km across the Taiwan Strait. The fortress tells the story of China's traumatic encounter with Western military technology.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Oyster Omelette (海蛎煎) — Small wild oysters harvested from Xiamen's coast, bound with sweet potato starch batter and eggs, then pan-fried until the edges are crispy and the center is custardy. Served with sweet chili sauce. The dish traces the Hokkien migration route from Fujian to Taiwan, Singapore, and Manila.
🎨 Artifact: Hokkien Nanyin Musical Instruments (南音乐器) — Nanyin — the ancient court music of the Hokkien people — uses instruments unchanged since the Han dynasty: the pipa held horizontally (the original playing position), the dongxiao end-blown flute, and the erxian bowed lute. The instruments themselves are artifacts of musical evolution.
🎵 Music: Gezaixi (Hokkien Opera) (歌仔戏) — A folk opera sung in Hokkien dialect, shared between Xiamen and Taiwan across the strait. The stories — drawn from historical romances and Buddhist tales — are performed with elaborate costumes, acrobatic martial arts, and a distinctive nasal vocal style that Hokkien speakers find irresistibly emotional.

🚄 Transport Options

Rail (Number) Flight (Number) Depart from Hotel Arrival
D2915 InUse 3U6039 12:30 lunch, then Train D2915 at 14:00 16:30 Shanghai
Day 9
Discovering Shanghai
Shanghai · 上海 · Paris of the East
The Bund 外滩
This 1.5-km waterfront esplanade is Asia's most iconic architectural ensemble. Built 1868–1937, its 52 buildings form a catalogue of Western styles: neoclassical HSBC (1923), Art Deco Sassoon House (now Fairmont Peace Hotel, 1929), Gothic Holy Trinity Cathedral, and the Beaux-Arts Customs House with its Big Ben clock tower.
Yu Garden 豫园
Constructed 1559–1577 by Ming official Pan Yunduan as a gift to his father ('Yu' means 'to please'). A masterwork of Jiangnan scholarly garden tradition: craggy Taihu rockeries, murmuring water, ancient ginkgos, and latticed windows framing composed 'living paintings.' The 3.3-metre Exquisite Jade Rock was originally destined for Song Emperor Huizong.
Shanghai Tower 上海中心大厦
At 632 metres, China's tallest building. Its spiraling form — inspired by a dragon's twist — reduces wind load by 24%. The 118th-floor observation deck at 561 metres offers views across the Yangtze Delta to the East China Sea on clear days.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Xiaolongbao (小笼包) — Soup dumplings: wheat wrapper pleated into 18 folds, encasing pork and collagen broth that liquefies during steaming. Lift with chopsticks, place on spoon, pierce, sip broth, dip in black vinegar and ginger. Invented 1875 at Nanxiang.
🎨 Artifact: Shanghai Art Deco (上海装饰艺术) — Between 1920 and 1940, Shanghai built more Art Deco structures than any city except New York and Miami. The Paramount, Park Hotel, and Broadway Mansions blended Streamline Moderne with cloud scrolls and dragon panels — a hybrid style found nowhere else.
🎵 Music: Shanghai Jazz (上海爵士乐) — 1930s cabarets nurtured a unique fusion of American jazz with Chinese instruments and vocals, popularized by Zhou Xuan. The Peace Hotel Jazz Bar, operating since 1929, is the world's longest-running jazz venue.
Day 10
Exploring Shanghai
Shanghai · 上海 · Paris of the East
French Concession 法租界
Established 1849, this 10-km² district retains its canopy of London plane trees (planted 1902), Art Deco apartments, and cafe culture. The lane houses (lilong) — blending Western structure with Chinese courtyards — represent one of the most successful architectural hybrids ever created.
Jade Buddha Temple 玉佛禅寺
Founded in 1882 to house two jade Buddha statues brought from Burma. The Sitting Buddha, carved from a single piece of white Burmese jade adorned with agate and emerald, weighs nearly a tonne. An active Chan (Zen) monastery with 70 resident monks.
Shanghai Museum 上海博物馆
Shaped like a ding (ancient ritual vessel), housing 120,000 objects across eleven galleries. Its ancient bronze collection — 400 pieces spanning Shang through Han — is the world's finest. Ceramics gallery traces 8,000 years from Neolithic Yangshao through Tang sancai to Qing famille rose.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Shengjianbao (生煎包) — Pan-fried pork buns: bottom crisped golden in cast iron, top scattered with sesame and chives, interior bursting with soup. Invented in 1920s Shanghai teahouses as breakfast for dockworkers.
🎨 Artifact: Suzhou Embroidery (苏绣) — One of China's Four Great Embroideries, using split silk threads finer than a human hair to create works resembling oil paintings. A masterpiece may require 100 million stitches and two years. 2,000 years old, UNESCO recognized.
🎵 Music: Pingtan (评弹) — A 400-year-old storytelling art combining narrative recitation with pipa and sanxian accompaniment. Performers retell episodes from classical novels in Suzhou-accented Shanghainese. Best experienced in a dim teahouse.
Day 11
Exploring Shanghai
Shanghai · 上海 · Paris of the East
The Bund 外滩
This 1.5-km waterfront esplanade is Asia's most iconic architectural ensemble. Built 1868–1937, its 52 buildings form a catalogue of Western styles: neoclassical HSBC (1923), Art Deco Sassoon House (now Fairmont Peace Hotel, 1929), Gothic Holy Trinity Cathedral, and the Beaux-Arts Customs House with its Big Ben clock tower.
Yu Garden 豫园
Constructed 1559–1577 by Ming official Pan Yunduan as a gift to his father ('Yu' means 'to please'). A masterwork of Jiangnan scholarly garden tradition: craggy Taihu rockeries, murmuring water, ancient ginkgos, and latticed windows framing composed 'living paintings.' The 3.3-metre Exquisite Jade Rock was originally destined for Song Emperor Huizong.
Shanghai Tower 上海中心大厦
At 632 metres, China's tallest building. Its spiraling form — inspired by a dragon's twist — reduces wind load by 24%. The 118th-floor observation deck at 561 metres offers views across the Yangtze Delta to the East China Sea on clear days.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Red-Braised Pork Belly (红烧肉) — Cubes of pork belly slow-cooked three hours in Shaoxing wine, rock sugar, star anise, and dark soy until the collagen renders into glossy lacquer. Mao Zedong's declared favorite — claiming it nourished his brain for revolution.
🎨 Artifact: Shanghai Propaganda Art (上海宣传画) — 1950s–1970s lithographic studios produced visually striking political posters blending Soviet Realism with traditional Chinese new-year print aesthetics. The Shanghai Propaganda Poster Art Centre houses 6,000 originals.
🎵 Music: Jiangnan Sizhu (江南丝竹) — Silk-and-bamboo ensemble music: erhu, pipa, and zhongruan with dizi and xiao flutes. Gentle interweaving melodies evoking the misty Yangtze Delta landscapes. UNESCO intangible cultural heritage.
Day 12
Departure — Farewell to Shanghai
Shanghai · 上海 · Paris of the East
French Concession 法租界
Established 1849, this 10-km² district retains its canopy of London plane trees (planted 1902), Art Deco apartments, and cafe culture. The lane houses (lilong) — blending Western structure with Chinese courtyards — represent one of the most successful architectural hybrids ever created.
Jade Buddha Temple 玉佛禅寺
Founded in 1882 to house two jade Buddha statues brought from Burma. The Sitting Buddha, carved from a single piece of white Burmese jade adorned with agate and emerald, weighs nearly a tonne. An active Chan (Zen) monastery with 70 resident monks.
Shanghai Museum 上海博物馆
Shaped like a ding (ancient ritual vessel), housing 120,000 objects across eleven galleries. Its ancient bronze collection — 400 pieces spanning Shang through Han — is the world's finest. Ceramics gallery traces 8,000 years from Neolithic Yangshao through Tang sancai to Qing famille rose.

Cultural Highlights

🍜 Signature Dish: Xiaolongbao (小笼包) — Soup dumplings: wheat wrapper pleated into 18 folds, encasing pork and collagen broth that liquefies during steaming. Lift with chopsticks, place on spoon, pierce, sip broth, dip in black vinegar and ginger. Invented 1875 at Nanxiang.
🎨 Artifact: Shanghai Art Deco (上海装饰艺术) — Between 1920 and 1940, Shanghai built more Art Deco structures than any city except New York and Miami. The Paramount, Park Hotel, and Broadway Mansions blended Streamline Moderne with cloud scrolls and dragon panels — a hybrid style found nowhere else.
🎵 Music: Shanghai Jazz (上海爵士乐) — 1930s cabarets nurtured a unique fusion of American jazz with Chinese instruments and vocals, popularized by Zhou Xuan. The Peace Hotel Jazz Bar, operating since 1929, is the world's longest-running jazz venue.

📸 Journey Reflections — Photographs You'll Treasure Forever

As you depart, carry with you not just photographs but the weight of lived experience across 6 cities and 11 nights.

📷 Guangzhou: The unforgettable sight of Chen Clan Ancestral Hall — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Shenzhen: The unforgettable sight of Huaqiangbei Electronics Market — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Hong Kong: The unforgettable sight of Victoria Peak — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Macau: The unforgettable sight of Ruins of St. Paul's — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Xiamen: The unforgettable sight of Gulangyu Island — a moment etched in memory.
📷 Shanghai: The unforgettable sight of The Bund — a moment etched in memory.

再见中国 — Zàijiàn Zhōngguó. Until we meet again.

Ready to begin your South China Coastal Odyssey journey?

📞 Enquire Now 💬 WhatsApp