The Bund (外滩): The Classic Line, Walked the Local Way
Mentioned in 2 local notesFree · always open
Yes, it's the most famous waterfront in China. It's also — both field notes insist — still a local pleasure, provided you treat it as a line, not a spot. The route one note spells out: start at People's Square, graze your way down the Nanjing East Road pedestrian street through the century-old food halls (the steamed buns and fresh-meat mooncakes get named), give the Peace Hotel's revolving door its moment, and arrive at the river with the light going down.
The other note's contribution is even simpler: the whole thing is free. The promenade never closes, the skyline works morning, dusk and lit-up night, and no ticket in the city buys a better show.
The essentials
| What | The riverfront promenade along the old banking quarter, facing the Lujiazui skyline — plus the walking line that leads to it |
|---|---|
| Where | East side of the old city centre, along the Huangpu; start the walk at People's Square for the full line |
| Metro | East Nanjing Road 南京东路 (Lines 2 / 10) for the direct approach; People's Square (Lines 1 / 2 / 8) to walk the whole way |
| Cost | Free, end to end — the snacks are the only toll |
| Hours | The promenade never closes; the skyline lights run through the evening |
| Booking | None |
Why locals rate it
Because the approach is the experience. Nanjing East Road's old food halls — the note names First Foodhall and Shen Dacheng — sell the city's edible history by the piece; the 1929 Peace Hotel anchors the far end with jazz-age swagger; and then the river opens up and Pudong performs. Done as a dusk walk, you get three eras of Shanghai in forty minutes, and the sunset stretch of the promenade the note calls out delivers the finale free of charge.
- Walk it west to east, ending at dusk. Arriving at the water as the lights come on beats showing up at noon glare — and the pedestrian-street snacking is better done before the crowds peak at night.
- The food halls are QR-and-queue territory. Point at what the locals are queueing for, pay by Alipay — set it up before you fly. A fresh-meat mooncake straight off the griddle is the correct order.
- Weekend evenings are a crush. The promenade holds the whole city on a Saturday night. A weekday dusk gives you the same skyline with room to put your elbows.
- Keep going: where Suzhou Creek meets the river, the quieter creek-side walk begins — a local escape hatch from the main promenade. Kora pins the turn.
Around it
The Oriental Pearl is the skyline's centrepiece — photograph it from here, or cross to stand beneath it. Upstream, the creek walk leads to the People's Cafe and Fotografiska. The full ranked list is on the Shanghai local map.
Sources
Compiled from 2 public Xiaohongshu field notes by Shanghai locals — roughly 64,000 likes between them at collection time (14 July 2026; each note covers several places):
Text and photos in the original notes belong to their authors; everything above is rewritten in our own words and we don't republish their photos. Compiled by Kora's team on the ground in China.
First time in China? Kora times the dusk, translates the food-hall queues, and pins the quiet turn onto the creek.
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