The Bund is located on the Huangpu River in Huangpu District, downtown Shanghai, bordering Huangpu River in the east, Yan 'an East Road in the south, Baidu Bridge outside Suzhou Creek in the north, and 52 classical renaissance buildings with different styles in the west, such as Gothic, Romanesque, Baroque and Chinese and Western styles, which have concentrated the financial centers and foreign trade institutions in the old Shanghai period.
Lujiazui is located on the Huangpu River in Pudong New Area, Shanghai, facing the Bund across the river. It is the headquarters of many multinational banks in Greater China and East Asia, and it is also one of the most influential financial centers in China.
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From 65438 to 2009, after the concession was occupied by Britain and France in the 1940s, the Bund became a sovereign area. Western powers operated, managed and built this concession in their own way. Commercial banks and financial enterprises have built large-scale buildings when they occupy a place on the Bund, and most of the buildings on the Bund have undergone three or more renovations.
In addition to buildings and sidewalks, street outlines need other decorative elements. Street lamps, signboards, manhole covers, trademarks, advertisements and other commercial "outfits", and even reflect fashionable pedestrian costumes and body characteristics. These elements together constitute a street view.
The Bund section is bound by the western street view rules, and the "wardrobe" is generally at the lintel under the eaves, and the distance to pick out the wall is limited. Street lamps are mainly decorated with iron flowers of Art Nouveau. Other road sections are decorated in Chinese style, merchants' banners can cross the street, and signboards and manhole covers are allowed to be taken off far away.