Chengdu’s Kuanzhai Alley Shopping Guide_What’s fun about Chengdu’s Kuanzhai Alley?
What to eat in Kuanzhai Alley?
1. The Ancient Tea Horse Road.
The down-to-earth dining environment, eating two skewers of mutton in a crowded alley, and eating a large bowl of authentic Chengdu griddle rabbit heads have made many tourists happy.
2. Go to the table.
The courtyard where I sit was once a school, and the kimchi jar in the courtyard was ingeniously used as a night light.
The store sells new-style Sichuan cuisine, and we recommend bamboo shoots and liver paste soup and blue tube fish.
3. Baili Coffee.
Drink coffee in the front hall and taste private dishes in the backyard; the glass house in the front hall reminds you of Paris, and the Big Dipper in the blue pool in the backyard puts you in a Taoist atmosphere.
What to do in Kuanzhai Alley?
1. Lufu Club.
Watching rare face-changing, rolling lanterns, Peking opera and other special folk art performances at the club will give you a deeper understanding of Chengdu.
2. Holi.
Chengdu's popular nightclubs feature elegant courtyard culture and exciting nightclub culture.
3. White night.
Qu Yongming’s bar and art distribution center.
Pioneer exhibitions and lectures on vision, poetry, and film are regularly held here.
Kuanzhai Alley is the collective name of three alleys: Kuan Alley, Narrow Alley, and Jing Alley. It is known as the most popular place in Chengdu. It is essentially the same as Jinli. You can eat, see, walk, and play basically.
Those are the ones.
In fact, we can know before going there that the surprise and satisfaction this kind of attraction brings to us is very limited. We still go to see it maybe just to check in.
People often compare Kuanzhai Alley and Jinli. My intuitive feeling is that Jinli is more scattered, has a stronger market atmosphere, and looks relatively old and quaint; Kuanzhai Alley is an unconventional, straight, parallel distribution of three alleys. Although there are
There are many distinctive ancient houses, but almost all the buildings are made of blue bricks and black tiles. The uniformity is somewhat deliberate. The dark gray bricks and stones are all intact and full. Not only is the ancient atmosphere hard to find, but it looks even more brand-new.
Of course, the biggest similarity between the two is that they are crowded.
It takes 3-4 hours to get there. Take Metro Line 2 and get off at People's Park Station, then walk 400 meters to get there.