Zhongshan Park (Shanghai)


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Zhongshan Park (simplified Chinese: 中山公园; traditional Chinese: 中山公園; pinyin: Zhōngshān Gōngyuán; Shanghainese: Tsonsae Gonyu), formerly called Jessfield Park and Zhaofeng Park (Chinese: 兆豐公園), is a park in Changning District, Shanghai, China.[1] The park has a large collection of trees and flowers. People fly kites and play sport games on the large meadow areas.[citation needed]

Zhongshan Park

Rose beds in Zhongshan Park

Zhongshan Park (Shanghai) is located in Shanghai

Zhongshan Park (Shanghai)

Location within Shanghai

TypePublic urban park
LocationChangning District, Shanghai, China
Coordinates31°13′20″N 121°25′08″E / 31.2223°N 121.419°E
Created1914
StatusOpen year round
Lotus flowers in Zhongshan Park
Map of Zhongshan Park (marked in green) and the surrounding area

The park is located centrally in the Changning District. To the north is Suzhou Creek and the East China University of Politics and Law. There is a large shopping mall with a tall skyscraper above, Cloud Nine, southwest of the park.

Zhongshan Park was established in 1914 by the Shanghai Municipal Council as Jessfield Park (極司非爾花園),[2] after Jessfield Road (now Wanhangdu Road) which led to the park. The park was in the extra-settlement roads area beyond the formal boundaries of the Shanghai International Settlement but was administered by the Settlement's authority, the Shanghai Municipal Council.

Before the property became a public park, it was the southern half of a private garden owned by H. Fogg, a British property developer. The northern half of Hogg's property was sold to the Episcopal Church to build St John's University. Thus, the park was also popularly known as "Zhaofeng Garden" (兆豐花園), after the Chinese name of Hogg's firm Jenner Hogg & Co. It was renamed "Zhongshan Park" in honor of Dr. Sun Yat-sen in 1944.

The park can be reached via the Shanghai Metro Line 2, Line 3 or Line 4 to Zhongshan Park Station.[3] It is northwest of the station, with an entrance south of Suzhou Creek.

  1. ^ "Shanghai Zhongshan Park". TripAdvisor. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  2. ^ Sharon Owyang (2010). Frommer's Shanghai. John Wiley & Sons. p. 175. ISBN 978-0-470-43794-0.
  3. ^ "Zhongshan Park". Explore Shanghai. Retrieved 13 September 2013.