Shantou Hotels
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Golden Gulf Hotel Shantou from $58.00 USD • Regency Hotel Shantou
Shantou is a huge, sprawling city, but everything of interest is in the western end,
a stubby, three-kilometre-broad thumb of land bounded south by the harbour and farther
west and north by various trailing outflows descending from the Han River estuary. One
of these, the Meixi Canal , surrounds Zhongshan Park (¥2) on the northern side of the
"thumb", a twenty-minute walk from the long-distance bus station - take
Xinghua Lu east over the Xinghua Bridge, then follow the footpath south along the canal.
The nicest place in Shantou to start the day in relative calm among ballroom dancers and
martial arts experts training with swords, there's a small outdoor theatre on the
eastern side (where Chaozhou opera gets an airing most weekends), a museum under
construction on the northern side, and plenty of trees and water.
Five minutes southwest of the park along Minzu Lu you'll find yourself on a large,
pavilion-centred roundabout . Anping Lu continues down into Shantou's seedy old colonial
quarter from here, but first turn east along Shengping Lu and seek out Tianhou Gong .
Built in 1879 and beautifully restored, it's possibly the smallest temple you'll see
anywhere. Partitioned in two, the main courtyard can barely contain twenty people, but
the statues and decorations are extraordinarily opulent, with guardian spirits
handpainted on the wooden doors, beams carved into dragons and animals, and roof tiles
showing scenes from the lives of the red-faced warrior Guan Yu, and a local heroine and
her tiger. A similar building a few minutes farther east along Waima Lu sports two large
rooftop dragons facing off across a glass "pearl".
Back at the roundabout, Anping Lu runs southwest for more than a kilometre towards
the waterfront between some incredible, mouldering colonial facades (once the city's
pride) and block upon block of three-storeyed town houses and warehouses, all with
elaborate, decaying plaster decor and fluted columns flanking windows and doorways.
Though decidedly downmarket and not a little claustrophobic - many of the buildings look
as if they're about to keel over on top of you - it's easy to spend a couple of
absorbing hours poking around. When you've had enough, press on farther down to Xidi Lu,
which crosses Anping and runs southeast for 200m or so to the Shanjiao Ferry (6am-at
least 6pm; ¥2). This carries you south across the harbour in about ten minutes, landing
at Jiaoshi , an airy headland covered in paths where you could spend half a day
wandering among granite boulders and low trees.