With a name like Opposite House, you wouldn't expect the ordinary.
The 98-room hotel, which opened in Beijing last year in the Sanlitun neighborhood, fits the image of a hip urban inn fancied by young adults and by monied travelers who are looking for contemporary design and style. Service is casual, yet quick and thorough.
From the outdoors to your room, The Opposite House challenges expectation.
Continue reading "Extremes in Beijing at China's luxurious Opposite House" »
A year after the summer Olympic Games, folks living in Beijing still seem to be on their best behavior.
"We are better because of the Olympics," said an employee at Opposite House, a new hotel in the sprawling city. "We are cleaner, more sophisticated," she said.
I didn't see any spitting on the sidewalks, a habit that was called to the attention of the Chinese and diminished significantly while the world watched the Olympic Games in the summer of 2008.
Continue reading "Scrunching toward Beijing's Forbidden City" »
If you must eat a cheeseburger in the country of Mao Zedong, I highly recommend a sandwich at the School House, near the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall, north of Beijing.
The restaurant, which serves western-style food on a sunny patio, makes a burger that is big and juicy, accompanied not only by French fries, but also a great view of the Great Wall. It's a fine place to unwind after a wall walk. My lunch was about $12.
Then, for a detour from modern munchies to the Ming Dynasty (1368 to 1644), make a short stop at the cloisonne factory nearby. It is on the road back to Beijing from Mutianyu.
Continue reading "A cheeseburger in China, shopping for cloisonne" »
Gleeful Morgan Freeman and sidekick Jack Nicholson zipping along the Great Wall of China on a motorcycle: The image was playing, rewinding, and playing again in my mind as a tour guide and I headed by car northeast through the suburbs of Beijing toward the mountains and world's largest cemetery.
Like Freeman and Nicholson in the movie, "The Bucket List," I planned to check off the Great Wall from my long itinerary of the world's special places.
No motorcycle for me. I would walk the wall as far as I could go.
Continue reading "China's Great Wall fits the bucket list" »