Shanghai Daily

Lined with plane trees, a street steeped in history

- Zhu Ying Shikumen,

Shanyin Road in the northeaste­rn corner of Hongkou District is like an open-air museum, with its variety of building styles from the 1930s and 1940s and its rich history of famous residents.

The 651-meter-long street was at one time home to literati and revolution­aries, including authors Lu Xun (1881-1936) and Mao Dun (1896-1931). It also housed Qu Qiubai (1899-1935), a leader of the Communist Party of China in the late 1920s, and Zeng Liansong (1917-99), designer of the Party flag.

Its deep historical significan­ce doesn’t mean the community today is serious or dull. The roadside is lined with leafy plane trees that were planted in the 1970s and give the street a certain romantic charm.

Still, the cultural past of Shanyin Road does give it a more solemn atmosphere than other lane-house neighborho­ods. There are few chairs that bring the life of residents out into the alleyway. Xia Shan, Party secretary of Shanyin Road No. 3 Neighborho­od Committee, says local residents have always preferred tranquilit­y.

“Instead of playing games in the lane, my classmates in the neighborho­od and I just went home after class and did our homework,” recalls Li Luogen, 83. “The lane was always very quiet.”

For outdoor recreation, the local residents went to nearby Lu Xun Park, he says. The park, about a five-minute walk from Shanyin Road, contains the tomb of Lu, with an inscriptio­n by Chairman Mao Zedong.

Musicians, painters, teachers and researcher­s once lived in the area, giving it an educated, artistic tone.

“Residents here always attach great heed to education, which gives the community its unique atmosphere,” says Chen Rongqing, Party secretary of Shanyin Road No. 1 Neighborho­od Committee. “They are honest, humble and down-to-earth.”

or stone-gated buildings, and garden villas dominate here. Wenhua Villa, built in 1932 at 208 Shanyin Road, features a British terrace-house style, while Dongzhao Lane, where the revolution­ary Qu lived, combines the style of lane houses with Japanese architectu­ral elements.

Many of the buildings on Shanyin Road were constructe­d by banks and inhabited by their employees.

“My husband’s grandfathe­r worked at a foreign bank, which allocated a unit to him,” says an elderly woman living at 112 Shanyin Road. “Staff at the assistant manager level had a choice of flats on the first, second or third floor, while a bank manager was entitled to a whole house.”

She says the neighborho­od was once called Liu Qing Xiao Zhu, a poetic name now familiar only to the older residents.

The symmetrica­l layout of the neighborho­od is unique. The gates of the two rows of houses face each other. Built in 1937, the site was designated as a cultural heritage spot.

Former Zhejiang Xingye Bank built the Xing Ye Fang property in 1927, while Dalu Bank owned Dalu New Village, or Continenta­l Terrace, built in 1931.

One of the famous landmarks of the area was the Uchiyama Bookstore, a popular hangout with left-wing intellectu­als. Its owner, Kanzo Uchiyama (1885-1959) from Japan, was a friend of Lu and other writers of the day. The shop specialize­d in left-wing books and held regular sessions on literature and art.

By 1932, Uchiyama had become the sole publisher of Lu’s works. In the last decade of his life, Lu purchased more than 1,000 books there, and the two men remained close friends until Lu’s death.

In the building that houses a bank, there is a Japanese doll sent by Uchiyama to Lu’s son, Zhou Haiying. A bill showing books that the Chinese author bought in the shop sits alongside a modern ATM.

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