fiogf49gjkf0d Hangzhou is a city of two halves. To the east and north is
downtown
Hangzhou, with its shops and tourist facilities, while to the west and south is the
lake
offering greenery and scenic spots. In fact, the lake shouldn't be regarded as being on the edge of the city - more realistically, its eastern shore marks the centre, and even the relatively remote western shore is now being developed for upmarket tourist accommodation.
The main east-west street, Jiefang Lu, runs from just north of the
train station
in the east to the lake, with major north-south streets crossing it, including Zhongshan Lu, and, closer to the lake, Yan'an Lu. The area around the
Jiefang Lu-Yan'an Lu intersection
(including the lake front and the small streets just to the north) is the commercial centre of town where you can shop, stay, eat and catch buses round the lake.
On the outskirts of the city, the
Qiantang River
, Hangzhou's gateway to the sea, flows well to the south and west, while the
Grand Canal
runs across to meet it from the north - many travellers to Hangzhou never see either of them.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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