Harbin is more a recreational centre than a
cultural mecca, a good place to shop and explore
the streets. The place to head for is Daoli
District's
downtown area , a triangle
outlined by Diduan Jie and Jingwei Jie, where
there are plenty of brand-name clothing boutiques,
fur shops and department stores. The smaller
streets and alleys around here are the best places
to see the city's
Russian architecture ,
with its decaying stucco facades and elegant
balconies. There's an extensive market selling
women's clothes off Xinyang Square, while the best
large department stores are on Diduan Lu and
Zhongyang
Dajie . Shops along the latter road have all
been restored, with plaques out front in English
detailing their past lives as colonial homes and
stores. Make sure you go in the department store
at #107, if only to see its spectacular skylight
and rendition of a section from Michelangelo's
Sistine Chapel mural, which hangs on the back
wall. Across the street is another beautiful
structure, the Jiaoyu Bookstore, well worth
exploring. There are numerous good restaurants and
bars along Zhongyang Dajie, which is paved with
cobblestones, and closed to cars, the result of a
city beautification project in 1998. In winter,
it's lined with ice sculptures, while summer sees
pavement cafés set up.
The riverbank area is another worthwhile
district to explore, starting from the Flood
Control Monument at the bottom of Zhongyang
Dajie. Built in 1958, the monument commemorates
the many thousands who have died in the Songhua
floods, and includes an added-on "1998"
to commemorate the horrible floods during the
summer of that year. The square here is a popular
hang-out for local people, as is Stalin Park
, a strip of land stretching along the east bank
of the river that's particularly lively on
weekends. People come to what must be China's last
public memorial to Stalin in order to wash their
clothes, meet and chat, and even bathe in the
river - this last not a good idea, as mercury
levels in the water are so high fish can no longer
survive in it. Others cluster around palm-readers
and storytellers, who relate old Chinese folk
legends. Just southeast of the monument, Zhaolin
Park , unremarkable in summer, is host to the
spectacular winter Ice Festival.
In winter, the Songhua River freezes
solid and you can take a horse carriage, rent a
go-kart or walk across - the ice is so thick it
will support a fully loaded bus or lorry and it
gets used as a road. In summer, ferries will take
you across to the northern bank and the resort and
sanatorium village of Sun Island (daily
8.20am-4.30pm; ¥5), an enormous park and leisure
complex with lakes for boating, swimming pools,
fairground rides and an arms museum. It's
unpleasantly busy on summer weekends, and getting
around takes a lot of walking - it's probably of
more interest to residents and Chinese tourists,
though winter's snow sculptures draw tourists from
around the world. You can also access Sun Island
by cable car during warm months (¥25 one
way).
But the most beautiful, and interesting, sight
in Harbin has to be the old Russian Orthodox cathedral
on Zhaolin Jie. Turn east off Zhongyang Dajie on
to Xi Shi Er Dao, and walk until you hit
Government Square, which fronts a new department
store; the church is right behind the store. Set
in its own square and restored to all its
onion-domed glory, the cathedral now houses the Harbin
Architecture and Art Centre (daily 9am-5pm; ¥10),
with a permanent photographic survey of Harbin's
history as a Russian railway outpost. The photos
are interesting and the surroundings superb.
Additional photos are available via touch-screen
computers inside, although the captions, like
those throughout the hall, are in Chinese.
South of the cathedral and directly east of the
train station along Hongjun Lu, Harbin's Provincial
Museum (Tues-Sun 9.30am-5.30pm; ¥8), opposite
the International Hotel, has a dull
permanent collection of dusty relics, and is only
open when a major exhibit is shown every other
month. At the Zoo (daily 8am-5pm; ¥5) in
the south of the city, on the route of bus #81
from Xidazhi Jie or #338 from the train station,
you can see the rare Manchurian tiger - only about
thirty are left in the wild. The tigers have bred
successfully here, saving them from extinction,
though being kept in a Chinese zoo is not much of
a life. There are some nice old working churches
in the Nangang District, at nos. 252 and 268 Dong
Dazhi Jie and one at Shike (ask the cab driver to
take you to nangang jiaotang). Harbin also
holds two unremarkable temples , Jile and
Wen, downtown. Due to frosty relations with the
Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s (subject of Ha
Jin's excellent Ocean of Words, a book of
short stories in English by a former PLA soldier
who was based on the Siberian border), Harbin also
boasts a network of underground bomb
shelter-turned-marketplaces . You can enter
from the train station and walk all the way up to
the International Hotel and beyond. The
markets sell a huge selection of goods, from
pirated video compact discs to leather jackets.