We begin at the Shanghai World Financial Center in Pudong, ascending to the 94th-floor observation deck for a view that makes Shanghai's scale finally legible: the Huangpu River below, the Bund's historical frontage on the opposite bank, and the entire spread of the world's most populous metropolitan area extending in every direction to the horizon.
From Pudong we cross to the Bund itself — the embankment whose name derives, via Anglo-Indian usage, from a Persian word for an earthen levee. The first British merchant firm opened here in 1846; by the 1930s it had become the most valuable stretch of real estate in Asia, lined with the headquarters of banks, trading houses, and hotel companies whose confidence in Shanghai's permanence was expressed in the grandeur of their buildings. That confidence proved misplaced in certain respects, but the buildings remain.
This afternoon we explore Yu Garden, a private classical garden established in 1559 by a Ming Dynasty official as a retreat for his elderly parents — intimate, layered, its rocks and pavilions and pools arranged according to principles of aesthetic surprise that reward slow looking. The adjacent Yuyuan Bazaar offers a livelier counterpoint: street stalls selling xiao long bao, pigeon egg dumplings, and cold spiced noodles alongside every variety of craft and souvenir.
This evening, a one-hour cruise on the Huangpu River views the Pudong skyline in full nocturnal display — lit in shifting colours, its towers reflected in the water, the Bund's composed historical presence on the opposite bank.
Overnight in Shanghai.
 
Included Meal(s): Breakfast and Dinner