Oriental Pearl Tower (东方明珠): Locals Shoot It, They Rarely Climb It
Mentioned in 2 local notesDecks ticketed · book ahead
Here's the honest pattern in our field notes: the Oriental Pearl appears as a subject, not a destination. One note is a viral clip of the tower lit by a lightning storm; the other points you at Lujiazui to look at the spheres and the three supertowers beside them. Neither note buys a ticket — because the tower is the one thing in the skyline you can't see from the tower.
Completed in 1994 at 468 metres, it's the building that announced modern Pudong, and it still carries the skyline. The local relationship to it is photographic: from the Bund across the water, from the streets directly beneath, from wherever the weather turns dramatic.
The essentials
| What | The 468 m broadcast tower (1994) that defines the Lujiazui skyline — observation decks in the spheres |
|---|---|
| Where | 1 Century Avenue 世纪大道1号, Lujiazui, Pudong |
| Metro | Lujiazui 陆家嘴 (Lines 2 / 14), a few minutes' walk |
| Tickets | Deck combos roughly ¥199–220 depending on how high you go; under-height children discounted |
| Hours | Roughly 9:00–21:00, last admission about 20:30 — sources vary slightly, so confirm on the day |
| Booking | Online advance booking is the norm — it skips a ticket-counter queue that easily runs an hour |
Why locals rate it — from the ground
The storm-video note says it best without words: this tower is Shanghai's weather vane, its mood ring, its establishing shot. The street-level circuit under the spheres, the glass-and-steel canyon of Lujiazui, and the long view from the west bank of the Huangpu are all free, and between them they cover every version of the picture. Going up is a different product — a fine one on a clear day — but know which one you're buying.
- The best photo of the tower is from the Bund — cross the river for the skyline, stand beneath it for the vertigo shot. Both cost nothing. If observation decks are the goal, the neighbouring supertowers compete hard; ask Kora what today's visibility actually justifies.
- If you go up, book before you arrive. The walk-up counter queue routinely eats an hour; timed online tickets walk past it. The booking flows are Chinese-first — send Kora your date and we'll sort it from the Chinese side.
- Check the sky, not the schedule. A ¥200 deck in haze is a grey window. Kora will tell you honestly whether tonight is a go-up night or a shoot-from-the-Bund night.
Around it
The tower is half of a pair: the Bund across the water is where its picture is taken, and the two make one evening — river line first, spheres after dark. The full ranked list is on the Shanghai local map.
Sources
Compiled from 2 public Xiaohongshu field notes by Shanghai locals — roughly 23,000 likes between them at collection time (14 July 2026):
Text, photos and video in the original notes belong to their authors; everything above is rewritten in our own words and we don't republish their media. Ticket tiers and hours cross-checked against 2026 guide listings — they shift, so confirm before you queue. Compiled by Kora's team on the ground in China.
FAQ
Is the Oriental Pearl Tower worth going up?
On a clear day, the sphere decks are a genuine thrill. In haze, you've paid ~¥200 for a grey window — and the tower itself is missing from your view. Locals mostly photograph it from the Bund instead; do that first, then decide.
Do I need to book tickets in advance?
Strictly speaking no, practically yes — advance timed tickets skip a counter queue that often runs an hour. The booking sites are Chinese-first; Kora books from the Chinese side.
First time in China? Kora reads the sky, books the deck when it's worth it, and points your camera when it isn't.
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