Sights for tourists in
Fuzhou are thin on the
ground. Apart from a few minor towers and temples,
the only two areas of town with any special
character are a couple of streets of old wooden
houses in the west around the
Lin Zexu Memorial
Hall , and the former
foreign concession
area south of the Min River. The
Min River boat
tour is also well worth joining, if you can
catch a day when it runs. Other than that, you could
take a few hours to visit
Gu Shan , a hill
9km outside the city, dotted with temples and
relics, but crowded to bursting with day-trippers.
A stroll down the wide, rather anonymous main
boulevard, Wusi Lu , has a few points of
interest. Moving from north to south, the first
place you come to, off Wusi Lu on the east side, and
a little north of Hudong Lu, is Wenquan Park
, a shady area of bamboo huts with rattan tables and
chairs where you can take snacks and tea. South of
the park on the main road, just past the Huaqiao
Hotel, there's a string of small antique
shops .
A long, two-kilometre haul farther south (take
bus #51), to the junction with Gutian Lu, brings you
to the huge expanse of Wuyi Square ,
dominated by a colossal statue of Mao Zedong looking
out over the square from the north. This statue was
erected here to commemorate the Ninth Congress of
the Chinese Communist Party in 1969, which was
significant in that it ratified Maoism as the
"state religion" of China, and named the
mysterious Lin Biao (subsequently disgraced) as
official heir to Mao's throne. Just behind Mao's
statue, the large modern building is Yushan Hall,
sometimes used for exhibitions, while behind here,
accessible by climbing up to the west of the hall,
is Yu Shan (Jade Hill; daily 8am-6pm; „4),
supposedly the cultural heart of the city, but its
sights don't amount to much. As you walk up beyond
the entrance, the first lane on your left leads to
the thousand-year-old Bai Ta (White Tower),
beside a temple and a small exhibition of the
contents of a Song-dynasty tomb excavated in Fuzhou,
which includes the preserved bodies of a man and a
woman and some silk garments. Back on the main path
leading up the hill again, you'll reach the summit
in about ten minutes, scattered with big old trees,
and giving views over the city.
West from Yu Shan, across Bayiqi Lu, is another
small hill, Wu Shan. From Wushan Lu, take the first
road on the right, then another lane to the left and
you'll find the Wu Ta (Black Tower),
constructed of black granite, dating back to the
same era as the White Tower and containing some
attractive statuary. Freshly restored, you can climb
up the seven floors to the top for great views over
the surrounding area, and the tiny temple
immediately next door.
North from Wu Shan, you'll soon reach the
east-west Daoshan Lu. The most interesting and
characterful old street in Fuzhou, lined with trees
and wooden houses, and fringed by tiny alleys, runs
north from here, initially called Aomen Lu, and
shortly becoming Nanhou Lu. On Aomen Lu, west side,
you'll find the Lin Zexu Memorial Hall (daily
8am-5pm; „2), a quiet, attractive couple of halls
and courtyards with funereal statues of animals and
big trees. Lin Zexu (1785-1850) is fondly remembered
as the patriotic and upright Qing-dynasty official
who did more than any other individual to fight
against the importation of opium by foreigners from
Hong Kong in the early part of the nineteenth
century, having thousands of chests of the drug
destroyed and even writing persuasive letters to
Queen Victoria on the subject.
The northwest of the city is dominated by Xi
Hu Park (daily 7am-9pm; „4) and the adjoining Zuohai
Park - basically a funfair - farther north. Xi
Hu itself is an artificial lake, formed by
excavations some seventeen hundred years ago. Today
you can go boating or stroll with the masses here.
Once within the grounds, Fuzhou Provincial Museum
had been completely demolished at the time of
writing, though it's hoped only to replace the
building - the interesting historical collection
included a 3500-year-old coffin-boat removed from a
Wuyi Shan cave. You can reach the south entrance to
Xi Hu on buses #1 and #2 from the southern end of
Bayiqi Lu, or #810 from the train station.
Finally, if you're walking back from Xi Hu Park
to the northern part of Wusi Lu, along Hualin Lu,
you'll pass the obscure Hualin Si , a
Tang-dynasty temple located in a grassy garden,
which has recently undergone extensive restoration
(bus #20 from Bayiqi Lu runs past).