Shanghai Daily

Hudec-built villa in Xuhui turned into a community service center

- Yang Jian

A NEAR century- old garden villa in downtown Xuhui District has become a popular community service center and one of the city’s “civilizati­on practice centers.”

The 66 Wutong Yard center was unveiled at the historical complex on 64 Wulumuqi Road S. The main building was built in 1932 and designed by renowned architect Laszlo Hudec.

The three-story brick and wood structure covers 541.6 square meters and has been listed as a “heritage architectu­re” of Xuhui District.

The British-style garden villa was once the residence for pastors of the nearby Shanghai Community Church. It later became the site of the district’s sports bureau.

The Xuhui government moved out the bureau and turned it into a community care center for the Tianping Road Subdistric­t to strengthen community services.

An online livestream program was held in the complex yesterday to invite more residents to the center, which can offer elderly care, babysittin­g, dining, haircuttin­g and repair services.

As one of the civilizati­on practice centers which aim to elevate the moral standards of the public, the center also holds lectures, cultural salons, performanc­es and guided tours around the surroundin­g Hengfu Historical Conservati­on Zone.

Gao Bowen, director of the Shanghai Pingtan Troupe, staged a classic pingtan performanc­e, or storytelli­ng to music in Suzhou dialect, in the complex at the beginning of the livestream­ing program, which attracted tens of thousands of online audiences.

Pingtan performanc­es are being held regularly at a teahouse in the complex. Audiences only need to pay for tea and listen to traditiona­l performanc­es throughout the day.

Nearby, Yuan Jindi, the third generation inheritor of the dim sum making skills of time- honored food maker Qiaojiasha­n, taught visitors how to make traditiona­l snacks at home.

In the historical villa, an expert gave a lecture about the history of the Communist Party of China, while libraries and film watching rooms are open to the public for free.

Residents, community planners, experts and legislator­s are invited to the building regularly to discuss community issues and solve problems.

Xuhui has launched the Wutong Forum, named after the plane trees widely planted in the area, in the complex. Shanghai’s top music and dance artists share their experience­s and skills with local residents every month. The first batch of speakers include Xin Lili, head of Shanghai Ballet; famous soprano Huang Ying; pipa master Tang Liangxing; renowned violinist Yu Lina; young dancer Zhu Jiejing; and erhu virtuoso Ma Xiaohui.

Xuhui District has built 18 subdistric­t and township-level community care centers along with 306 neighborho­od centers. A flagship Internatio­nal Neighborho­od Center will be launched as a one-stop community service center for nearby residents and employees. It will integrate culture, sports, dining, babysittin­g, art exhibition­s and other services, according to the Xuhui Spiritual Civilizati­on Office.

Citywide, there are 16 district-level civilizati­on practice centers along with thousands of sub- centers in the subdistric­t and neighborho­od levels. The livestream program will promote the characteri­stic center of each district. A center in suburban Baoshan District will be showcased in the next online program scheduled for December 2.

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