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  วันพุธที่ 20 สิงหาคม พ.ศ.2568
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Animategroup.com - GAMEMAG - People’s Square: Shanghai’s Urban Canvas
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Topic : People’s Square: Shanghai’s Urban Canvas
«date: 18 สิงหาคม 2568 , 08:33:07 »
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People’s Square sits at the very center of Shanghai’s Huangpu District, bordered to the north by West Nanjing Road and to the south by East Huaihai Road. This expansive public plaza serves as both a civic landmark and the official zero‐kilometre point from which highway distances in Shanghai are measured, marked by a monumental fountain near its northern edge. Flanked by high–rise offices, historic buildings, and verdant parks, People’s Square has become the beating heart of a city that balances rapid modernization with cultural preservation.To get more news about peoples square, you can citynewsservice.cn official website.

Originally part of the Shanghai Race Club’s horse racing grounds in the early twentieth century, the area ceased hosting races during World War II. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, the new government continued the ban on gambling and repurposed the racecourse land. Spectator stands and a broad central avenue were constructed to stage public parades, and the northern section eventually evolved into People’s Park, leaving the southern lawn as our present‐day People’s Square.

A comprehensive transformation in the early 1990s reshaped the square into a modern urban plaza. The municipal government offices relocated here from the Bund’s historic HSBC Building, while the Shanghai Museum moved from its former quarters in an old office block. Architectural icons such as the Shanghai Grand Theatre and the Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Hall rose around the square, lending contemporary flair and drawing millions of visitors each year. What was once a racecourse has become Shanghai’s foremost civic and cultural showcase.

Stretching across roughly 140,000 square meters after the 1993 renovation, People’s Square is bisected by the broad, tree-lined People’s Avenue. This 600-metre-long, 32-metre-wide boulevard features a 5.5-metre green belt flanked by 6.5-metre non-motor vehicle lanes on each side, integrating nature and pedestrian space into the urban core. The southern plaza spans 3,844 square meters and is anchored by a 320-square-metre circular musical fountain, its colored glass tiers and purple flowerbeds invoking a sense of ceremony with each water and light display2.

Surrounding the main plaza are some of Shanghai’s most celebrated landmarks. To the northwest stands the Shanghai Grand Theatre—a glass-domed performance venue; to the east, the Urban Planning Exhibition Hall showcases the city’s past, present, and future through immersive exhibits. Beneath the square, expansive underground levels house retail complexes like Hong Kong Famous Brands Street and Dimei Shopping Center, as well as one of Asia’s largest parking garages and transformer substations, ensuring that the bustle above is complemented by efficiency below.

People’s Square plays a critical role in Shanghai’s civic life. It is the site of official celebrations, cultural performances, and festivals such as the annual New Year’s Eve countdown and Lantern Festival displays. Locals flock here for morning tai chi sessions on the lawns, afternoon picnics by the fountain, and evening strolls under illuminated trees. The square’s open design fosters social interaction, community gatherings, and spontaneous artistic performances, reinforcing its status as a democratic gathering place.

For visitors, reaching People’s Square is seamless. The People’s Square Metro Station is an interchange for Lines 1, 2, and 8, placing travelers mere steps from the square’s main entrances. A ring of bus stops serves both the north and south sides, while bike-sharing docks and taxi stands dot the perimeter. Inside, multilingual information kiosks, guided tours at the Urban Planning Hall, and rotating exhibitions at the Shanghai Museum ensure that the square is not merely a transit hub but a destination in its own right.

As Shanghai continues to evolve, People’s Square endures as a living tapestry of history, governance, art, and daily life. From its origins as a colonial‐era race track to its current role as a dynamic urban plaza, it encapsulates the city’s journey through revolution, reform, and renaissance. Whether one is tracing highway zero, marveling at a theater performance, or simply watching doves circle above the fountain, People’s Square remains the symbolic and physical center of Shanghai’s boundless energy and ambition.


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