Yuyuan Garden and Bazaar, Shanghai China
Yuyuan Garden and Bazaar, Shanghai China 上海豫园
Jardín y Mercado Yuyuan. Shanghái China 上海 豫园
Yuyuan Garden and Bazaar, Shanghai, HD Experience
Please read my blog thoughts on the Yuyuan Garden here:
The Yuyuan Garden near Shanghai's Nanjing Road, and the accompanying tourist bazaar before you get to the garden, was to be one of the highlights of my trip to Shanghai. I hope this video can do it justice. Filmed May 11, 2012.
Yu Yuan Gardens and Bazaar in Shanghai
From Right in the middle of the Old Town, the Yu Yuan Gardens are a maze of traditional Chinese temples, ponds, and rock gardens. The bazaar area was fun for the kids, they got to bargain for video games, DVD's and cards, right by the Starbucks Coffee! so Shanghai...
Shanghai Trip 2016: Part 5 - Yuyuan Bazaar, The Bund, Tianzifang & Pudong
Sights and view at the Yuyuan Bazaar, The Bund, Tianzifang and Pudong.
Burke's Backyard in China, Yu Yuan Bazaar
Don Burke visits the Yu Yuan Gardens Bazaar in Shanghai, which includes gardens, goldfish and tourist markets.
Find the full fact sheet here:
Vlog#6 Yuyuan Bazar - Templo Confucio
Un pedacito de la China tradicional, en el corazón de Shanghai. Yuyuan Bazar ha sido reconstruido y mantenido con la arquitectura tradicional histórica de la ciudad.
Jardín y Mercado Yuyuan. Shanghái (China)
Es 26 de julio de 2015 y nos aventuramos a conocer, entre las miles de personas que se encontraban en el lugar, el famoso Jardín y Mercado Yuyuan, de la ciudad china de Shanghái, junto a Inma Estévez, auqnue nos centraremos más en éste precioso jardín típico chino.
El Jardín Yuyuan está situado, concretamente, en la zona norte de la ciudad, cerca de la antigua muralla.
Fue diseñado durante la dinastía Ming, entre los años 1559 y 1577. Un funcionario, de nombre Pan Yunduan, decidió construirlo a imagen y semejanza de los jardines imperiales. El funcionario quería que sus padres, que no podían trasladarse a la capital ya que eran demasiado mayores para viajar, pudieran ver que aspecto tenía un jardín de este estilo. Por eso le dio el nombre de Jardín Yuyuan (Yu significa salud y tranquilidad)
Después de la muerte del funcionario, la familia de Yunduan cayó en bancarrota. El jardín cayó pronto en el olvido y no recuperó su esplendor hasta que en 1760 un grupo de comerciantes lo compró. A principios del siglo 20, una parte del jardín fue convertido en bazar por las autoridades. A partir del año 1957 se inició su restauración, restauración que abarcó todo el barrio que rodea al jardín, construido también durante la dinastía Ming. En 1982 fue declarado monumento nacional.
Para conocer más datos, os recomiendo ver el vídeo completo porque está muy bien explicado.
Un vídeo realizado por Aníbal Clemente e Inma Estévez.
La copia de este vídeo será denunciada.
TEMA DEL VÍDEO:
Light Awash de Kevin MacLeod está sujeta a una licencia de Creative Commons Attribution (
Fuente:
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Yuyuan Market. Shanghai
En en centro de la ciudad, en la parte antigua, se encuentra esta zona de tiendas. Sorprende por la combinación de construcciones tradicionales chinas con cadenas de restaurantes de comida rápida, cafeterías, vendedores ambulantes, etc. Se encuentra junto a los Jardines Yuyuan (Yu garden).
Yuyuan Garden @ ShangHai China
This is an excellent model of classical Chinese gardening architecture under state preservation.It was built at 1559 as the private garden of Pan YunDuan.
中国 上海 豫园
Szanghaj - ogrody Yu Yuan
Yuyuan Garden & Bazaar - Shanghai
Yuyuan Garden & Bazaar - Shanghai
12 China Yuyuan Bazaar
Shanghai. Explored from dawn to late at night, on foot and by bus. Ben recorded, edited and published. Camcorder Sony HDRCX110. Video AVCHD 1440x1080/50i. Editing Movie Studio Platinum 12. Music largely by Chinese composers and musicians. Published YouTube HD MPG4 Sep 2014.
Shanghai Bazaar 2017
Shanghai Bazaar 2017
Shanghai: Yu Garden and nearby areas
This video shows the Yu Garden or Yuyuan Garden located in the center of Shanghai's Old Town. The garden is adjacent to the bazaar of the Old Town which is also a tourist attraction. This video also shows the bazaar.
Yuyuan Gardens, Shanghai, China, Asia
Yu Garden or Yuyuan Garden is an extensive Chinese garden located beside the City God Temple in the northeast of the Old City of Shanghai, China. It abuts the Yuyuan Tourist Mart and is accessible from the Shanghai Metro's Line 10 Yuyuan Garden Station. A centerpiece is the Exquisite Jade Rock, a porous 3.3-m, 5-ton boulder. Rumours about its origin include the story that it was meant for the imperial palace in Beijing, but was salvaged after the boat sank off Shanghai. Yu Garden was first conceived in 1559 during the Ming Dynasty by Pan Yunduan as a comfort for his father, the minister Pan En, in his old age. Pan Yunduan began the project after failing one of the imperial exams, but his appointment as governor of Sichuan postponed construction for nearly twenty years until 1577. The garden was the largest and most prestigious of its era in Shanghai, but eventually its expense helped ruin the Pans. The garden was inherited by Zhang Zhaolin, Pan Yunduan's granddaughter's husband, and then passed to different owners. A section was briefly organized by Zhang Shengqu as the Academy of Purity and Harmony and the Ling Yuan, today's East Garden, was purchased by a group of local leaders in 1709. A group of merchants renovated the increasingly decrepit grounds in 1760 and in 1780 the West Garden was opened to the general public.
The gardens suffered damage numerous times during the 19th century. During the First Opium War, the British army used the Huxinting Teahouse as a base of operations for several days in 1842. During the Taiping Rebellion, the Small Swords Society ran its headquarters in the Dianchun Hall; by the time Qing troops recovered the garden, the original structures had nearly all been destroyed. They were damaged again by the Japanese in 1942 before being repaired by the Shanghai government from 1956 to 1961. They were opened to the public in 1961 and declared a national monument in 1982. The City God Temple or Chenghuang Miao is a temple located in Shanghai, China, within the old walled city. Today the City God Temple not only refers to the large temple complex, but also the traditional district of commerce in the city, surrounding the temple. There are over a hundred stores and shops in this area, and most of these store buildings are nearly a century old. The temple connects to the Yuyuan Garden, another landmark of the old city. The temple is colloquially known in Shanghai as the Old City God Temple, in reference to a later New City God Temple, which no longer exists. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, the old city was occupied by the Japanese while, initially, they left the foreign concessions alone. As a result, worshippers from the concessions were cut off from the temple. As a response, local merchants built a new temple and attached market place near what is today Yan'an Road and Jinling Road, in the Shanghai International Settlement. This was known as the New City God Temple. After the end of World War II, the New City God Temple waned in popularity as worshippers shifted back to the Old City God Temple. The new temple and markets were demolished in 1972. However, the New City God Temple remains in use referring to the locality around the site of that temple.
Yu Yuan Old Town Bazaar in Shanghai Old Town (2010)
Shanghai Old Town Bazaar Night View. So beautiful. Notice the long queue for the Nanxiang steamed buns. Unbelievable!!!
Shanghai, Yuyuan bazar et jardin Yu
Le quartier de Yuyuan Bazar et le jardin Yu, Shanghai octobre 2009
El Jardín Yuyuan de la ciudad de Shanghái
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Yuyuan Bazaar, Shanghai, China: It Is More Than a Shopping Paradise
Get to know more about Yuyuan, visit
There is something about Yuyuan Bazaar that makes it tick to travelers who love culture and shopping. It is a shopping paradise, but unlike shopping centers in urban settings, Yuyuan is surrounded by a number of cultural highlights – the Yu Garden, the Shanghai Old Street/Old Town, the Taoist Temple of the Town God, the colors of the local lifestyle, and the tea houses.
A lot of Shanghai streets are either impassable or one-way during weekends. It is best to take a taxi; ask the driver to drop you off somewhere near the Yuyuan Bazaar, and start wandering to explore the area.