Pudong (Chinese: 浦东 Pǔdōng) is a district of Shanghai on the eastern side of the Huang Pu River, an ultra-modern business hub full of high-rise buildings including several of the world's tallest.
The term "Pudong" is somewhat ambiguous:
As part of Deng Xiao Ping's "Reform and Opening Up" program starting in the late 1970s, China introduced a program of Special Economic Zones to encourage development and foreign investment. The program has been quite successful and all those zones have seen rapid development. Pudong New Area may be the most successful of the lot; in particular, the pace of development in the downtown Pudong area which this article covers has been absolutely phenomenal. Until about 1990 Pudong was mostly farmland and low-rise residential or factory areas. An urban planning site has "Pudong Miracle" photos showing the same view in 1990 and 2010; the contrast is incredible. They also have an interesting critique of the urban design.
The most highly developed area of Pudong is Lujiazui, a peninsula sticking out into the Huang Pu directly across from Downtown Shanghai, the older center of town on the Puxi (west) side. The banner photo at the top of the page is within Luziajui; the photo on the right is a view of Lujiazui from the Bund, a riverside boulevard in Puxi. This is a view that is photographed a great deal.
Century Avenue is the main drag of Lujiazui and extends inland beyond there, ending at Century Park. It is about 5 km (3 miles) long. Most of Pudong's tourist attractions are on or near that street, either in Lujiazui or a short way inland. The first four stops east of the river on Metro line [2] are on the street, while the fifth, Century Park, is on the other side of the park.
There is no bridge for pedestrians to cross, so if coming from the west side of the Huangpu River, your options are metro, taxi, ferry, sightseeing tunnel or bus. The cheapest way is to take the ferry from the Bund, near Yan'an Donglu, at the price of ¥2. Using the metro costs only a bit more.
Many lines of the Shanghai metro serve Pudong. Four of them meet at Century Avenue Station:
A much more expensive way of crossing the river is the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel (north of the Peace Hotel), basically an overpriced 647 m underground travelator featuring several minutes of blinking lights at ¥45 a pop. (This "ride" lacks creativity or exhilaration, but toddlers who like to move at slow speeds and witness a few harmless props might enjoy it.)
Yan'an Tunnel is the main road in and out of the district for cars. Expect a long line of cars throughout rush hours (also 17:00-21:00 on weekends) where you can get stuck up to 30 min. If you need to cross by taxi at these hours, try to talk your driver into using Renmin Lu Tunnel further south.
Coming in from Pudong Airport, the choices are taxi at around ¥150, Metro Line [2] which runs until 21:00, or a magnetic levitation train. The Maglev is extremely fast (top speed 430 km/h or 270 mph, but some trains only run at 300 km/h or 187 mph). The in-town terminus is Longyang Rd Station with connections to metro lines [2], [7] and [16]. Travel time is around 8 minutes. It finishes running at about 21:30. Maglev tickets cost ¥50 single (¥40 with flight ticket for the same day), or ¥80 return.
Many tourists will just take Metro Line [2] to Lujiazui Station and walk from there.
There is an elevated walkway that runs over the roads from the station to the Pearl Tower and the World Financial Centre via the Super Brand Mall and the IFC Mall. Some attractions can also be reached via tunnels from the station.
Line [2] is the main east-west line through Shanghai and the city's busiest line, averaging 1.5 million rides a day.
On the Puxi side it runs under Nanjing Road through downtown and out to Hongqiao Airport and Hongqiao Railway station near its western end. In Pudong it runs through downtown under Century Avenue, and extends to Pudong Airport at its eastern end.
Line [4] is another important one for Puxi-Pudong connections. It is a circular line which encompasses most of central Shanghai. Most of it is in Puxi, but it also comes into Pudong. Century Avenue Station, mentioned above, is the main connecting point, but there are other stations in Pudong.
Lines [7], [8], [9], [10], [11], [12] and [13] also cross the river and provide Puxi/Pudong connections.
Lines [6] and [16] are both entirely on the Pudong side of the river and both run roughly north-south. Line [6] runs near the river, from the northern edge of Pudong through the center then southwest. Line [16] runs south from Longyang Road Station into Nanhui, all the way to the southeast corner of Shanghai.
The ultra-fast (over 400 km/h, 250 mph) magnetic levitation train (the maglev) is also entirely on the Pudong side of the river; it runs from Pudong Airport to Longyan Road Station.
Many of the sights of Pudong are the large buildings of Lujiazui, all built since 1990. As of mid-2017 the area has three buildings on Wikipedia's list of the world's 50 tallest, including two in the top ten. Counting the Pearl Tower — which does not make that list because it does not have floors all the way up — there are four buildings over 400 m, a quarter mile high.
Jinmao Tower (金茂大厦; Jīnmào Dàshà), Century Ave, Lujiazui (east of Lujiazhui Station), 31.2372°, 121.5014°. This building has 88 floors (plus five in the spire) and reaches 420.5 metres (1,380 feet). The tower houses the Grand Hyatt Shanghai and features a 31-story atrium that starts in the jazz lounge on the 57th story and rises up like a space station. An Italian restaurant, Cucina, on the 55th floor offers spectacular views of the Bund and the rest of old Shanghai. For about the same cost as going up in the Pearl Tower, you can enjoy a gourmet pizza lunch and savor virtually the same view. Enter via the Grand Hyatt main entrance, take elevator to lobby on 54, then next elevator to Cucina (closed Sep 2019). There is also a restaurant on the 88th floor, which is the top floor and China's second highest visitor platform. Alternatively, head for one of the Grand Hyatt's many bars (see Drink). ¥50, ¥25 student 2016-10-05
Shanghai Tower, 31.2355°, 121.501°. Observation Deck 10:09-21:00 (last admission 20:30). At 632 m (2,073 ft) high and 128 stories it is China's tallest building and the second tallest in the world as of mid-2018. The Observation Deck is at 552 m on the 118th and 119th floors. The elevator goes straight up and accelerates to 18 m/s max. View to all directions possible. There is a small cafe, free Wifi available. Adult 180¥, senior/student ¥160, child >1m ¥90 2016-10-23
Shanghai World Financial Center (SWFC), 100 Century Ave (next to Jinmao Tower), 31.2366°, 121.5031°, +86 21-68777878. Opened in 2008 and is Shanghai's second tallest building at 492 m. There are three viewing levels on floors 94, 97 and 100. The observation level allows you to look down on the tall neighboring Jinmao and Oriental Pearl Towers. However, a better view of the river and the Bund can be obtained from the lower sphere of the Oriental Pearl than from the SWFC. An alternative to the observation decks is to go to one of the hotel bars or restaurants on or near the 98th floor. ¥150 The area also has other attractions.
Shanghai Ocean Aquarium (上海海洋水族馆网站-首页), 1388 Lujiazui Ring Rd (Metro line [2] Lujiazui Stn, exit 1, walk towards Pearl TV Tower and look right), 31.2426°, 121.4972°. 09:00-18:00 (21:00 in summer). This is an entertaining and up to standards exhibition over two floors, including a system of glass tunnels that lets you get up close and personal with sharks. ¥120, with some discounts for children
Century Park, 31.2179°, 121.5483°. This is Shanghai's biggest park. Unfortunately, there is a lot of concrete and paved roads, and many areas have vegetation that is still under development or poorly cared for. Still a good and relaxing get-away. Bike rental available (expensive, from ¥40 per hour). ¥10
{{see | name=Shanghai Science and Technology Museum | alt=上海科技馆 | url= | email= | address= | lat=31.2203 | long=121.5374 | directions=Metro line [2] Science and Tech Museum Stn | phone= | tollfree= | fax= | hours= | price= | wikipedia=Shanghai Science and Technology Museum | image=20090829_Robot_in_Shanghai_Science_and_Technology_Museum_3985.jpg | wikidata=Q855376 | content=Focuses on Western Science. Entertaining and educational for children. The buiding is quite impressive. }}
Shanghai International Finance Center (IFC), 31.2365°, 121.5011°. Has two towers around 250 m and an 85 m building between them. Includes the large IFC Mall shopping complex and the Ritz-Carlton Hotel. There is a pedestrian tunnel to Lujiazui Station.
China Art Museum Shanghai (中华艺术宫), 205 Shangnan Rd (Near Exit 3 of China Art Museum Station, line [8].), 31.186°, 121.49°, +86 400 921 9021. Tu-Su 10:00-18:00 (last entry at 17:00), open on all national holidays.. The former China Pavillion for Expo 2010 now is a museum of Chinese modern art. Permanent exhibitions focus on some of the best-known Chinese painters' works, the history of Chinese modern and contemporary art, and the culture of Shanghai. Visits start at the top and you work your way down through the galleries, whose quality decreases a bit the lower you go in the building. On the top floor is the special exhibition of the digital version of Along the River During the Qingming Festival (aka Qingming Shanghe Tu), a famous ancient Chinese painting, featuring a 110-meter long 3D animated interactive remake of the original painting. Multilingual audio guides and English-speaking volunteer tour guides are available. Free except for special exihibitions 2016-02-05
Shanghai Expo Park, In two parts, the larger in Pudong and the smaller in Puxi (Metro line [8], Yaohua Road Station), 31.1906°, 121.4886°. Shanghai hosted the 2010 World Expo, recording the most visitors in the event's history. Since then, the Chinese Pavilion has remained in operation and there are various other sights.
New York University Shanghai, 31.2254°, 121.5344°. A joint venture between the American school and East China Normal University. Most courses are taught in English. As of 2016 it had 1200 students, all undergraduate. 2017-10-06
Long Museum Pudong (Dragon Art Museum Pudong Branch, 龙美术馆浦东馆), No. 210 Lane 2255, Luoshan Road (罗山路2255弄210号) (About 1.4km east of Huamu Road Station on Metro line [7]; follow Huamu Road eastward until you get past the intersection with Luoshan Elevated Road), 31.21810°, 121.56994°, +86 21 68778787, exhibition@thelongmuseum.org. 10:00-17:30, closed on Mondays. The Pudong branch of the private art museum established by the wealthy collectors Liu Yiqian and his wife Wang Wei. The museum also has branches in Xuhui District and the western city of Chongqing. Groups of 26 people or more are required to make a reservation at least 2 days before their visit. ¥100 (including tour guide) 2018-07-10
{{listing | type=see | name=Maglev Museum | alt=上海磁浮交通科技馆 | url=http://www.smtdc.com/en/xnlv5.html | email= | address=Longyang Road 2100 | lat=31.20464 | long=121.55359 | directions=Longyang Road station on lines [2], [7] and [16] | phone= | tollfree= | hours=09:00-17:30 | price= | image=Shanghai Maglev Museum 20181003.jpg | wikidata=Q10868005 | lastedit=2019-11-14 | content=The Shanghai Maglev Museum is on the first floor of Maglev Longyang Road station, 1250 m², which covers most of the history and technology of the maglev train. The museum is composed of “Birth of Maglev”, “Maglev Shanghai Line”, “Maglev Technology”, “Maglev Superiorities” and “Prospects for Maglev” sections. }}
Pudong Mosque (浦东清真寺), No. 375, Yuanshen Road (walk north from Yuanshen Stadium Station on line [6]), 31.235806°, 121.533111°. The initial mosque building was constructed in 1935. It was expanded in 1984 and rebuilt in 1995 to its current size. 2021-02-10
Shanghai Disneyland (上海迪士尼乐园), 31.144526°, 121.658891°, +86-21-3158-0000. 8AM-8:30PM. Disney's newest theme park, which opened in 2016, features seven themed areas: Mickey Avenue, Gardens of Imagination, Fantasyland, Treasure Cove, Adventure Isle, Tomorrowland, and Toy Story Land. While similar to other Disney theme parks in most aspects this location differs in a few ways such as a including a focus on Chinese culture and rides found in no other Disney theme park like the Tron Lightcycle roller coaster and Pirates of the Caribbean – Battle for the Sunken Treasure. 2021-07-04
Hotels in Pudong cater mostly to the business traveller. For a wider range of choices or to be closer to the main tourist sights, look in Puxi instead.
The main Shanghai office of the Entry and Exit Bureau is located in Pudong.
Take the escalator up to the third floor for the area that serves foreigners. (First floor issues Chinese passports, second is for Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan residents.) Take a number from the ticket machine. There are different series of numbers for different services; an English-speaking staff member is at the machine to ensure you get the right one.
Everyone will need a photo to put on the visa form and a photocopy of the main page of the passport; for an extension, you also need a photocopy of the current visa. Photocopies can be obtained on the third floor (back left hand corner of the room, as seen by someone facing the service counters) and photos on the ground floor (under the escalators).
Be prepared for a bit of a wait; this is a large office and quite efficient but there were over 200,000 foreigners in Shanghai as of the 2010 census. If each of them renews their visa once a year, that works out to over 750 people per working day. Expect to wait for anything from 30 minutes to three hours to submit an application and anything from three days to two weeks for them to process it. For the shortest wait, arrive around 08:30, queue until 08:45 when the doors open, get a number and hope to be served shortly after the counters open at 09:00.
When you submit an application, they will give you a form with date and cost for pickup of your passport with the new visa. Pickup is on the ground floor, off to the right as you enter the building. You need to queue twice, first (with the form in hand) to pay and then (receipt in hand) to get your passport.
This office (third floor) also issues a form which many consulates require if you apply to replace a lost or stolen passport; you need a police report for the loss or theft to get that form. Once you have the new passport you need to return here to get a new visa. The process as a whole is remarkably tedious and annoying.
The obvious place to go is the rest of Shanghai, especially downtown Puxi which is right across the river and has most of the city's tourist sites and facilities. Shanghai also includes several quite scenic water towns.
Nanhui is just south of central Pudong, and has some beaches popular as a weekend getaway for Shanghai residents. It also has the Shanghai Disney Resort.
For possibilities outside Shanghai Municipality, see the Shanghai article,.
Primary administrative division