What are the classic old hotels in Shanghai?
The Green Wave Gallery is one of the most famous hotels in Shanghai, and foreign heads of state are usually arranged to eat here. Located in the middle of Chenghuang Temple. At the gate of Chenghuang Temple is the old Shanghai Hotel. No.242 Fuyou Road, Huangpu District. It is also an old-fashioned hotel in Shanghai with a long history. The local cuisine is excellent, and the stewed lion's head is the best. It is the first choice for compatriots from Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan and overseas Chinese. Meilong Town Restaurant, located on Nanjing West Road, is also a well-known Shanghai time-honored hotel. Xinya Cantonese Restaurant, located in the pedestrian street of Nanjing East Road, was a very famous Cantonese restaurant before liberation. Xinghualou is a Cantonese restaurant, which is more famous for its moon cakes, but its Cantonese cuisine is also very authentic. Jieerjing Sichuan Cuisine Restaurant is also an old-fashioned Sichuan cuisine restaurant, located at Yandang intersection of Nanchang Road, next to the yandang road exit of Fuxing Park, which is an old-fashioned Shanghai restaurant featuring needle-piercing tofu. Kutokuhayashi Vegetarian Restaurant, located on Nanjing West Road, next to Tomorrow Square, is the largest vegetarian restaurant in Shanghai. Renowned at home and abroad. But the price is very expensive. Wang Baohe Hotel, located on Fuzhou Road, is famous for its crab feast, and its Wang Baohe yellow wine is also very good. Maxim's Restaurant, located at the edge of No.2 Food Store on South Shaanxi Road, is a home-cooked restaurant of our gang and is very popular with Shanghai Laokele. But I don't know if it's still there. Hongchangxing mutton restaurant is located on the pedestrian street of Nanjing East Road, upstairs of Baodaxiang. It belongs to a Muslim restaurant, and it is very famous for brushing mutton. But now it doesn't taste like it used to. All the hotels listed above are local time-honored hotels with a certain historical period in Shanghai, which are basically state-owned hotels. I wonder if the questioner is satisfied.