Beijing Travel Guide
- About Beijing
- Beijing History
- Did you know?
- Weather in Beijing
Getting around
- Public transport
The local bus system in Beijing is dirt cheap and extremely extensive, but tough to negotiate for non-Chinese speakers. Travel by subway or taxi is far easier, although remember to carry with you the name of your destination in Chinese characters to show taxi drivers. Very few speak English. Beijing’s subway is slick, modern and easy to use. Information in English is available from the
Beijing Government ( Website: www.ebeijing.gov.cn )
Signs and announcements are in English as are ticket-buying machines. Tickets cost a flat rate for a single journey, no matter how far you travel. The ABC (Airport to Beijing City) express train connects the airport with Dongzhimen and Sanyuanqiao subway stations.
- Taxi
Taxis in Beijing are plentiful, cheap and metered, and are usually just hailed from the street. Tipping is not expected.
Beijing Beiqi Taxi
Telephone: +86 10 8766 5998 ext 8053 Although you’ll need a Chinese speaker to help.
- Driving
Few tourists attempt to drive in Beijing, as hiring a car is a lengthy process and roads are congested. Visitors also need a Chinese driving licence, which can only be obtained by resident permit holders. Basically, don’t bother.
- Car hire
Foreign residents are required to have their own Chinese license to be able to drive in China (please note that Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan-issued licenses aren’t considered Chinese licenses). Having a Chinese driver’s license is a basic requirement to rent a car in China.
Car rentals usually come with a driver, but familiar foreign car hire agencies are only slowly breaking into the market.
- Bicycle hire
Cycling is a great option in Beijing. The roads are as flat as a chessboard, and almost all of them have bicycle lanes, although cars don’t always keep out of them! You can hire bikes from many youth hostels and hotels. Alternatively, try;
Bicycle Rental Service
Address: Beijing, Xicheng District.
Telephone: +86 10 6314 1871
Website: www.english.visitbeijing.com.cn
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Things to see in Beijing
Attractions
- Temple of Heaven Park
Beijing’s largest imperial park is a wonderful place to spend a sunny morning watching locals fly kites and practise tai chi. It’s a sublime setting for the Temple of Heaven complex, centred on the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests, an exquisite tiered temple used by the emperor to ask the gods for favourable harvests. Facing the hall is the Circular Mound Altar, where the emperor prayed for good weather.
Address: Dongcheng, TianTan Road, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6702 8866
Opening times: Daily 08:00-17:30.
Website: www.tiantanpark.com
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: Yes
- Summer Palace Beijing’s magnificent
Summer Palace was used by the royal court as an escape from the heat of the city. Resplendent after a makeover, the former imperial residences are located on the shores of Kunming Lake, which is dotted with small islands, ornamental bridges and a marble boat that was once a teahouse. Flanking the lake is Longevity Hill, crowned with landmark pagodas and pavilions.
Address: Haidian, 19 Xinjiangongmen Road, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6288 1144
Opening times: Daily 08:00-17:00.
Website: www.summerpalace-china.com
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: Yes
- Hutong alleyways
Exploring these centuries-old alleyways ranks among the most memorable of Beijing experiences. Contained within are historic siheyuan (courtyard homes), often hidden behind large, red wooden doorways. Many have been split into smaller, less uniformed dwellings, adding to the ramshackle charm. Though many hutongs were destroyed in Beijing’s push to modernise, some areas remain, particularly around the Drum and Bell Towers and Nanluoguxiang in Dongcheng, and close to Houhai lake.
Address: Dongcheng, Xicheng, Beijing.
Opening times: Daily 24 hours.
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: No
UNESCO: No
- Tiananmen Square
There’s only one place to begin exploring Beijing: Tiananmen Square, where Mao Zedong declared the foundation of the People’s Republic. Though widely identified with the suppression of student-led pro-democracy protests in 1989, the world’s largest public square is an impressive sight, flanked by Communist edifices and the towering gatehouse to the Forbidden City. Adjacent is the Chairman Mao Memorial Hall, where Mao Zedong’s preserved body is on display for perpetuity.
Address: Beijing, Dongcheng.
Opening times: Daily 24 hours.
Admission Fees: No
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Forbidden City
Built in the 15th century, the former home of the Emperor of China is a magical complex of courtyards, palaces, pavilions and gardens, scattered across a vast compound and protected by fortified walls. Home to 24 emperors from the Ming and Qing dynasties, this UNESCO Heritage site is amazingly preserved, despite the political upheaval in the 20th century. The palaces and chambers house a vast collection of priceless relics, including paintings and ancient pottery.
Address: Dongcheng, 4 Jingshan Street, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 400 950 1925
Opening times: Daily 08:30-16:30, Mon Closed.
Website: www.dpm.org.cn
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: Yes
- National Center for the Performing Arts
Known as ‘the Giant Egg’ due to its shape – an ellipsoid dome of titanium and glass – this massive venues has three state-of-the-art performing halls: the Opera House, the Concert Hall, and the Theatre. Nestled west of Tiananmen Square and near the Forbidden City, it is easy to get to and enjoy a great performance.
Address: 2W Chang’an St, Xicheng District.
Telephone: +86 10 6655 0000
Opening times: Tue-Sat 09:00-17:00.
Website:www.chncpa.org
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Beihai Park
Beihai Lake covers almost half of the 69-hectare (171-acre) Beihai Park, providing locals with somewhere to escape the city crush. This is a popular spot for ice-skating in winter and boating in summer. Qiong Hua Island (Jade Flowering Island), to the southern end of the lake, is reached by an arched marble bridge and is home to a Tibetan Buddhist shrine (the White Pagoda) and the Yong’an Temple (Temple of Everlasting Peace).
Address: Xicheng, 1 Wenjin Street, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6403 3225
Opening times: Daily 06:30-21:00.
Website: www.beihaipark.com.cn
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Drum Tower and Bell Tower of Beijing
Drum Tower was originally raised in the 13th century and reconstructed around 1420, when the adjacent Bell Tower also appeared. The buildings served as the city’s official time markers and alerted citizens to curfews when the city was under siege. Still containing the original drums and bells, the strikingly different towers offer wonderful views across Beijing.
Address: Dongcheng, Di’anmen Wei Main Street, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 8402 7869
Opening times: Daily 09:00-17:00.
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Chaoyang Theater
Over the past 20 years, more than three million people have seen “The Flying Acrobatic Show” performed by the acclaimed Beijing Acrobatic Troupe. Each show lasts about an hour and discounts are available if tickets are booked online.
Address: China, Beijing, Chaoyang.
Telephone: +86 135 5252 7373
Opening times: Daily 15:00-20:00
Website: www.chaoyangtheatre.com
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Beijing Zoo
The oldest zoo in the Asia Pacific region is home to world-famous giant pandas and more than 7,000 other animals, including golden monkeys from Sichuan, tigers from Hunan, and snow leopards from Tibet. A private garden during the Qing dynasty, it later became an experimental farm and small menagerie. It first opened to the public in 1908, but was destroyed during the Japanese occupation of Beijing (1937-1945), reopening in 1950.
Address: Xicheng, 137 Xizhimen Outer St, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6839 0274
Opening times: Daily 07:30-18:00.
Website: www.bjzoo.com
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access:
UNESCO: No
- Jingshan (Prospect Park)
North of the Forbidden City, Jingshan Park contains Coal Hill, a mound created from the soil excavated from the palace moat. It’s a peaceful spot with views over the golden rooftops of the imperial buildings and is the highest point in Beijing’s inner city.
Address: Xicheng, 44 Jingshanxi Street, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6403 8098
Opening times: Daily 06:00-21:00.
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
- Lama Temple
The Lama Temple (also known as Yonghe Temple) was built in the 17th century as a centre of learning for the Yellow Hat sect of Tibetan Buddhism. Closed after the Cultural Revolution, it reopened in the 1970s and now hosts a community of around 70 monks. Inside are a series of grand halls covered in exquisite woodcarving and ornamental tiles. The furthermost hall has a stunning 18m-high (59ft) statue of Maitreya, the future Buddha, carved from a single sandalwood tree.
Address: Dongcheng, 12 Yonghedong Street, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 8419 1919
Opening times: Daily 09:00-16:00.
Website: www.yonghegong.cn
Admission Fees: Yes
Disabled Access: Yes
UNESCO: No
Tourist Offices
Beijing Municipal and City Appearance Management Committee
Address: 80 Xidan N St, Xicheng District, Beijing
Telephone: +86 10 6601 1988
Opening times: Mon-Sun 09:00-17:00.
Website: www.csglw.beijing.gov.cn
The Beijing Municipal Commission of Tourism Development maintains a network of Beijing Tourist Information Centers around the city where you can book city tours and excursions and get tourist information. As well as the handy office near the Forbidden City, close to Beihai Park, there are branches near;
- Beijing Railway Station
Telephone: +86 10 6528 8448
And on the shopping thoroughfare of
- Wangfujing Quanjade
Telephone: +86 10 6522 3310
Tourist passes
On Wednesdays, the first 200 visitors to many of the city’s museums are admitted free of charge, or you can buy a Beijing Museum Pass, which offers discounts to most of the big museums and cultural sights, available from China Post offices. If you plan to travel by bus, buying a rechargeable “Superpass” travel card will get you discounts on bus journeys all over the city.
Things to do in Beijing
- Check out Beijing’s flourishing contemporary art scene
This former industrial complex in the Dashanzi district is the hive around which all Beijing’s contemporary artists swarms.
798 Art District
has a wealth of galleries that hold revolving exhibitions from local and international artists, and there are cafes, bars and art shops to ensure you won’t have to go more than 30 minutes without cashing some of those holiday tokens.
Website: www.798district.com
- Get on your (ice) bike
In summer, Shichahai Lake’s glass-like surface is dotted with lotus flowers, whilst weeping willows huddle round the edges. In winter, it turns into a giant skating rink where you can hire ice bikes, thus hopefully avoiding the indignity of sore knees and elbows. You can hire everything down at the lake, which is open during daylight hours.
- Get yourself a good Cupping
One of China’s most offbeat medicinal treatments is cupping: the act of applying heated cups to skin to effect suction. It can help all manner of bodily ailments, from skin and blood disorders to rheumatic problems. There’s not many places left that still do it so if you want to give this most ancient of treatments a whirl, book a session
- Lose yourself in the worlds weirdest food market
Even if you’re a dyed-in-the-wool meat and potatoes hound, a trip to Beijing will be incomplete with visiting Donghuamen Night Market. Culinary weirdness abounds – get those chops round spiders on sticks, deep fried scorpions, sheep’s penis and maybe even a seahorse.
- Stoke your fire at Dragon Gorge
Set 80km (50 miles) from downtown Beijing is Longqing Xia, otherwise known as Dragon Gorge. Take the dragon escalator up to the gorge – an escalator claimed to be the longest in the world.
Climb up the mountains or take a cable car, before taking a river cruise between the lush great pillars that jut from the water. Adrenalin enthusiasts will get their fill here too, with bungee jumping, rock-climbing and abseiling on offer.
Beijing Trip will get you there ( Website: www.beijingtrip.com )
Beijing tours and excursions
Beijing tours
- Cycling and walking tours
The Tourist Information Centre and Cycle China office, opposite the east gate of Jingshan Park, Dongcheng District, arranges cycling tours with English-speaking guides as well as hutong walking tours at night and entertaining trips around the city by motorcycle sidecar.
Telephone: +86 10 6402 5653
Website: www.cyclechina.com
- Rickshaw tours
The Beijing Tourist Information Center office on Qianmen Dajie, near Beihai Park, offers one-hour rickshaw tours with an English-speaking guide around Beijing’s historic hutong alleys. Private agencies offer similar trips.
Telephone: +86 10 8882 8000
Website: www.china.org.cn
Beijing excursions
- Ming Tombs
The final resting place for the emperors of the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644), the Ming Tombs are located 50km (31 miles) from Beijing and are reached by the Spirit Way, an ancient highway guarded by huge statues of animals and men. 13 Ming emperors are buried around the valley but only three of the underground burial chambers – the Chang Ling, Ding Ling and Zhao Ling tombs – are open to the public. Arrange a trip through your hotel, or one of the
Beijing Tourist Information Centers ( Website: www.mingtombs.com )
- Great Wall of China
China’s premier attraction stretches some 6,700km (4,163 miles) through northern China and remains the most iconic symbol of the country. Founded in the 3rd century BC, the Great Wall of China is in fact a number of connected and unlinked walls, built at various points in history to create a defence against invading marauders. Much of the wall that exists near Beijing was built between the 14th and 18th centuries as a defence against the Mongols.The nearest section of the wall to Beijing is at Badaling, but this has been heavily restored and is very touristy.
The sections at Mutianyu and Jinshanling are also restored but less busy than Badaling. For a more authentic visit, the sections of the wall at Huanghuacheng, Zhuangdaokou, Gubeikou and Jiankou have been left as atmospheric ruins, but they are harder to reach and difficulty to walk along. Arrange trips through your hotel, or one of the Beijing Tourist Information Centers.
Shopping in Beijing
As you would expect from a metropolitan city, Beijing has no shortage of mega shopping malls, but the city is also home to time-honored shops such as the silk retailer Rui Fu Xiang.
- Key areas
The main tourist shopping area is pedestrianised Wangfujing Street, crammed with brand outlets and department stores. Sanlitun Bar Street, Taikoo Li Sanlitun and Qianmen Street are all popular shopping areas in Beijing.
- Markets
Housed in a giant warehouse-style mall, the Beijing Silk Market (8 Xiushui East Street) is a tourist trap, but its fine tailormade clothes are worth the hard bargaining.
Collectors of antiques should head to Liulichang Street, a few minutes’ walk south of Hepingmen subway station. This Beijing market is crammed with ancient-style shops, reconstructed in a traditional way and stocking antiques – some are genuine, though many are reproduced – and curios.
The open-air Panjiayuan Flea Market has great bargains on items such as jade, wood panelling, pottery and memorabilia.
- Shopping centres
The vast malls within the Oriental Plaza, on Wangfujing Street, have over 300 brand stores and restaurants, as does the China World Shopping Mall, Shin Kong Place (SKP Beijing), and The Place which all cater to those with upscale-brand obsessions and large wallets.
- Opening hours
Most shops in Beijing are open daily 10:00-22:00.
- Tax information
The VAT rate is 17% (13% for certain goods). Foreign visitors can enjoy tax refund on the same day in designated stores if the velue is over RMB500.
Beijing Food And Drink
Food In Beijing
- Peking duck
Roasted and eaten in a thin pancake with cucumber and a sweet plum sauce.
- Mongolian hot pot
A Chinese version of fondue, usually eaten communally. It consists of simmering soup in a large round pot, into which is dipped a variety of uncooked meats and vegetables.
- Jiaozi
Steamed dumplings, typically filled with pork or other meat, and chopped vegetables.
- Kung po chicken
A classic Sichuan dish, marinated with chillies.
- Dim sum
Small portions of food served in steamer baskets, usually involving dumplings and rice noodle rolls.
- Stinky tofu
Fermented tofu, often sold as a snack.
- Shanghai hairy crab
Considered a delicacy in eastern China.
- Oyster omelette
A speciality of the Fujian region.
- Hainanese chicken rice
A Hainan dish also popular in Southeast Asia.
Drink In Beijing
- Baijiu
A strong alcoholic spirit, also known as sorghum wine.
- Tsingtao
The most common of China’s beers, similar to German lage.
Restaurants in Beijing
Eating has a special place in the Chinese psyche, and visitors won’t have to walk far to find a restaurant serving Beijing’s famous Peking duck, or more eclectic delicacies such as fried pigs’ trotters and duck’s tongue.
The international dining scene is maturing too, with French restaurants proving particularly popular with locals, but with such fantastic Chinese food of offer, many visitors prefer to use mealtimes to sample the nation’s fascinating and varied regional cuisines. The Beijing restaurants below have been grouped into three pricing categories:
Expensive (over ¥300)
Moderate (¥100 to ¥300)
Cheap (up to ¥100)
Prices are for a three-course meal for one, including a bottle of house wine or equivalent. You won’t be able to get wine in cheap restaurants, where beer or local spirits are the order of the day. Tipping is only expected at the plushest of restaurants in Beijing.
Expensive
Beijing Da Dong
Cuisine: Chinese
There are no prizes for guessing the house speciality at this Chinese restaurant in the industrialmodernist 1949 The Hidden City compound. The upscale menu of duck delicacies is accompanied by a stellar wine list, and many say it serves the best Peking duck in town.
Address: Beijing, Dongcheng, Jinbao St, 88.
Telephone: +86 10 8522 1234
Website: www.dadongdadong.com
- Opera Bombana
Cuisine: Italian Restaurant & Fresh Bakery
Created by celebrity chef Umberto Bombana (who also co-owns the three Michelin star retaurant 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong), this upmarket Italian restaurant offers creatively presented contemporary Italian fare. The setlunch is particularly popular – guests enjoy quality Australian Wagyu beef or artisanal spelt spaghetti for a few hundred yens.
Address: No.9, Dongdaqiao Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 5690 7177
Website: www.operabombana.com
- TRB Hutong
Cuisine: French
Nestled in a 600 year-old temple, this restaurant wins with big, bold flavours and artfully presented small plates. Appealing to the Francophile tastes of the Beijing elite, the menu is French-flavoured, but with subtle nods to Asia.
Address: Dongcheng,23 Shatan Beijie, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 8400 2232
Website: www.trbhutong.com
Moderate
- Dali Courtyard
Cuisine: Yunnanese
Down a backstreet hutong off Gulou Dongdajie, this delightful courtyard restaurant serves excellent set menus of authentic Yunnanese cuisine. The menu runs from Yunnanese dumplings and sausages to fish with chilli and fresh vegetables and herbs from the Yunnanese hills. Come summer, the tree-filled garden terrace is one of Beijing’s most appealing dining spots.
Address: Dongcheng, 67 Xiaojingcheng Hutong, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 8404 1430
Website: www.thebeijinger.com
- Din Tai Fung
Cuisine: Taiwanese
The dim sum steamers keep coming at this Taiwanese restaurant in Chaoyang, and despite the moderate prices, the dumplings are some of Beijing’s best. Xiaolong bao (southwestern-style steamed dumplings) are the house speciality but there are loads of other delicate bites to try, including tasty red-bean paste stuffed dou sha bao.
Address: Chaoyang, 24 Xinyuan Xili Zhongjie, Liangmaqiao, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6462 4502
- Hatsune
Cuisine: Japanese
At the top of the mid-range bracket, this chic Japanese restaurant draws a mixed crowd of businessmen and hip 20- somethings who don’t mind paying extra for something a little special. The chefs prepare sushi and handmade California rolls with real artistic flair, all enjoyed in a snappily dressed dining room.
Address: Chaoyang, 19 Sanlitun, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6581 3939
Cheap
- Donghuamen Night Market
Cuisine: Chinese
A sizzling treat for street-food addicts, the Donghuamen Night Market is clean, cheap and phenomenally popular. Red lanterns lead the way to this bustling collection of stalls serving everything from meaty kebabs to obscure Chinese delicacies such as silkworms and scorpions. Pancakes, dumplings, stews and dipping sauces also accompany these skewered treats.
Address: China, Bei Jing Shi, Dongcheng.
Website: www.dpm.org.cn
- Haidilao
Cuisine: Fondue
Beijing’s spice lovers make a beeline for this low-key Fondue restaurant for its epic hot pots, with incendiary broth for dipping and a host of tasty, fresh ingredients to dip into it. As well as fiery flavours, you get fun and friendly service and the live theatre of noodle-pulling, all ingredients for a fun night out.
Address: Beijing, Chaoyang.
Telephone: +86 10 8779 8911
Website: www.haidilao.com
- Mr Shi’s Dumplings
Cuisine: Chinese
This small hole-in-the-wall establishment serves a wide range of reasonably priced dumplings. No-frills, just good homemade dumplings.
Address: Beijing, Dongcheng.
Telephone: +86 10 8405 0399
Website: www.thebeijinger.com
- Najia Xiaoguan
Cuisine: Manchurian
Tucked into a historic courtyard, this Manchurian restaurant was reputedly founded by the personal doctor of a Qing dynasty emperor, using recipes borrowed from the imperial kitchens. Regular diners rave about the tender pork belly with dates, and the intriguing game meat stews.
Address: Chaoyang, 10 Yonganli, Jianguomenwai Dajie.
Telephone: +86 10 8236 2692
Beijing Nightlife
Beijing’s nightlife and entertainment scene is undergoing a revolution, as modern Beijingers enjoy the benefits of an income that their parents could only have dreamed of.
The most popular nightlife area (heavily frequented by expats) is Sanlitun, where bars offer Western beer at Western prices, and are generally much livelier than elsewhere.
Much more laid back and with a more underground vibe to it, thanks to its live-music scene, is the area around the Drum and Bell Towers (known as Gulou), including the bars on and around historic Nanluoguxiang alley. Nearby, Houhai (Back Lakes) is lined with bars and cafés, which are great places for a drink by day but which transform into noisy, neon-lit karaoke bars at night.
Beijing is the cultural capital of China and many pre-Cultural Revolution art forms are being revived to sit alongside Beijing’s strong contemporary music, arts and literary scenes. Western influences have also been embraced to transform traditional Chinese art forms into contemporary theatre, with Chinese translations of Western plays also available.
The best city listings magazines are City Weekend, Time Out Beijing, and The Beijinger.
Bars in Beijing
- 4corners
Part bar, part restaurant, part courtyard-style beer garden, 4corners is a hip hutong hangout with live music, beers and cocktails and plenty of youthful enthusiasm. There’s also an interesting menu of healthy Asian and global food to munch while you socialise, including some great gluten free pizzas.
Address: Xicheng, 27 Dashibei Hutong (off Gulouxidajie), Beijing
Telephone: +86 10 6401 779
- Jianghu
Jianghu is reserved for you, the courtyard is still there, the music is still there, and everyone sitting around is a friend. The candlelight flickers, the old wooden chairs, and the fresh faces come from all over the world. They use their own language and music to vent and express their hearts. This Jianghu is everywhere, it belongs to every turbulent soul, every lonely heart. Tears set off the courtyard, joy is attached to the rain of stars, I wake up or get drunk in my Jianghu.
Address: Beijing, Dongcheng.
Website: www.site.douban.com
- Red
Colorfully designed, this hip bar has a great atmosphere and it also serves up superb cocktails.
Address: 29 Houhainanyan, Shichahai, Xicheng District, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 156 0023 3938
Website: www.red.com
- The Tiki Bungalow
Expect the voodoo iconography, bright Aloha vibe, and excellent cocktails in this award-winning bar. Its Lost Classics cocktails are glorious – from “Blood & Sand” to “Hanky Panky”, we like them all.
Address: Bei Jing Shi, Dongcheng.
Telephone: +86 158 1051 1562
Clubs in Beijing
- Club Mix
Like Vics Club, which sits directly opposite it, Mix has an emphasis on mainstream dance tunes and is a popular club in Beijing. It’s a little cheesy and the dancefloor gets cramped, but this place still packs in the punters and attracts some wellknown local and international DJs.
Address: Chaoyang, Workers Stadium north gate, Gongrentiyuchang Beilu, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6506 988
- Dada Bar
This resolutely weird and undeniably cool cocoon of a club puts together a line-up of taste-making local DJs and a handful of international stars. Musically, it runs the gamut from skweee to cold wave and everything electronic in-between, so expect to stay late.
Address: Dongcheng, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 183 1108 0818
- Vics Club
Arguably the king of Beijing clubs, the cavernous Vics Club is located inside the north gate of the Workers Stadium and mixes up a nightly thrash of soul, R & B, pop and reggae. Popular with visiting celebrities and music stars, the dancefloor is packed to the rafters on Ladies Night on Wednesdays.
Address: WCMX+25R, Gongrentiyuchang N Rd, Chaoyang, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 5293 0333
Live music in Beijing
- Dusk Dawn Club
This cool, hutong hold-in-the-wall hosts an eclectic schedule of live music – from indie rock to folk and jazz. The drinks menu runs to craft beers and single malts, and if you want a break from the live sets, you can pull back to the main bar or pop out onto the veranda.
Address: 14 Shanlao Hu Tong, Dongcheng, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6407 8969
- Yugong Yishan
Housed in part of the former government headquarters of the short-lived Chinese warlord Duan Qirui, Yugong Yishan is one of Beijing’s coolest live music spots. It boasts a high stage, a stellar sound system, elegant interior design, an upstairs lounge and an excellent list of mostly local acts, mixed with some not particularly well-known foreign names.
Address: Dongcheng, 3-2 Zhangzizhong Lu, Beijing.
Telephone: +86 10 6404 2711
Website: www.yugongyishan.com
