There's nothing much to detain you in Luoyang
itself; but if you've got time between trips to the
attractions outside town, there are a few nice
restaurants, a museum and the old city to poke
around in.
The main downtown area is around the T-junction
where Jinguyuan Lu meets Zhongzhou Zhong Lu. Here
you'll find the Department Store, six storeys of
shopping with a café in the basement, next door to
the Xuangong Hotel. Head west down tree-lined
Zhongzhou Zhong Lu for a kilometre, or take bus #9,
#2, or trolleybus #102, and you come to Wancheng
Park (daily 8am-6pm; ¥4), at its best in April
when the peonies are blooming. Luoyang's peonies
have been intensively cultivated and collected so
that the city now boasts over 150 varieties, which
have found their way on to every available patch or
scrap of ground - a splendid sight. The peony motif
is also everywhere in the city, from trellises to
rubbish bins.
Out of season, Wancheng is just another park,
with a melancholy zoo, and the river dries up and
smells in winter. However, excavations
undertaken in the park have revealed much of the
Zhou capital of 771 BC including walls, palaces,
temples and a marketplace, though none of this can
be seen by the public. Across the suspension bridge
in the northwest corner of the park there are also
two Han tombs , which have yet to open to the
public, apparently with some good early murals.
Otherwise, almost all that has been left of the
ancient cities has been gathered into the museum
(Tues-Sun 8am-noon & 2-5.30pm; ¥12), just east
of the park. There are five halls arranged
chronologically, which at first, with no English
captions and a surfeit of the bronze vessels that
seem to characterize all provincial museum
collections, look uninspiring, but get much better
as you go on. Look in Hall 2 for the Shang
bronzes and an endearing jade tiger from
the Zhou; Hall 4 has some Indian-influenced Wei
statuary , as well as a model farm from a Han
tomb with a sow and her row of piglets; and in Hall
5 you'll find some comical Tang polychrome
figures , including camels and a travelling
merchant keeling over under the weight of his pack.
Upstairs is an excellent new hall, in which
well-presented relics, copiously captioned in
English, are grouped by material - bronze, silver
and jade - rather than by dynasty, an unusual system
that here works very well, allowing direct
comparisons across the centuries. As usual, the Tang
wins hands down in the pottery section with their
expressive camels and a hooknosed, pointy-chinned
foreigner, and in gold and silver , where
their ornate decorative objects show the influence
of Persian and Roman styles. There are some strange
little animal sculptures in the jade section that
belong to the Xia and Shang, and in the bronze
section, particularly extensive as the area around
Luoyang entered the Bronze Age before the rest of
China, a horse's harness from a Shang chariot.
Turn off the glossy main boulevards and you'll
find the rutted streets lined with piles of rubble
and stacks of identical brown apartment buildings, a
marked contrast that illustrates how rapid and
uneven the city's development has been. Head east
from the train station along Dao Nan Lu and you pass
a huge wholesale produce market selling apples,
oranges and nuts, which enlivens a gritty street
whose other main feature seems to be coke factories.
South of here, and east of Xiguan roundabout, the
alleyways of the old city are a rewarding
area to browse around, preferably by bicycle as it's
fairly spread out. The best alleys are those south
of Zhongzhou Dong Lu, where whitewashed,
half-timbered buildings house small family shops
whose wares include seals (engraved with your name
while you wait), tea and art materials.