Find everything from hutong boutiques to high street flagships
Beijing has no shortage of great shopping options, whether you're looking for old Beijing brands, markets, or even a perfectly tailored suit.
For everything from hutong boutiques selling the best emerging Chinese designers to trendy malls, there's a lot more to shopping in Beijing than Sanlitun. Here are some of the best shopping streets in Beijing.
Guozijian Jie
Best for Stylish homeware.
A leafy strip between Yonghegong and Gulou, Guozijian Jie offers homegoods stores, tea shops and contemporary clothing. Across from home decor shop Lost & Found, stop into newcomer Paint (pictured), the younger and funkier sister store to CBD boutique Dongliang. Make it a point to scout out high-design, albeit high-price, homestore FNJI to
take in the beauty that is modern Chinese interior design – on a clear
day sit in the shop’s shady courtyard to sip a cardamon latte and dream
up your apartment goals. Wander over to the east side of the street to
find fabric stores and tailors alongside Buddhist shops that surround
nearby Yonghegong Lama Temple.
Yangmeizhu Xiejie
Best for Trendy designer boutiques.
Besides being a hub for Beijing’s design scene, the hutongs of Dashilar are
full of traditional craft shops as well as trendy designer boutiques.
Yangmeizhu Xiejie is the most packed in the area. Along the alley, scout
out Triple Major (pictured) for
indie magazines and contemporary lines like French label Lemaire and
Croatian Damir Doma’s eponymous co-ed label. The street also has you
covered for homewares: Ubi Gallery for ceramics, Book Design Shop
for coffee table books and stationery and Beijing Postcards for
beautifully reproduced vintage maps. After all that shopping, get your
caffeine fix at Soloist.
Wangfujing Dajie
Best for High street flagships.
One
of Beijing’s most well-known shopping areas, Wangfujing plays host to
major international brand flagship stores. While the area’s popular with
tourists (consider yourself warned), it’s history as Beijing’s major
destination for international shopping after China’s economic opening
warrants it a spot on this list. You may know it for its deep-fried
scorpions on sticks, but the largely pedestrianised area is also home to
Asia’s biggest Apple store and Nike’s flagship Asia store, housed inside shopping mall Beijing apm, as well as huge fast fashion outlets like Zara and Gap, and high-end designer shops.
Liulichang Xijie
Best for Traditional Chinese art and supplies.
Image: Flikr/Antoine Lacroix.
In the market for a calligraphy brush at tall as you? Liulichang is your spot. Situated a couple blocks south of Qianmen,
this shady hutong consists solely of shops dedicated to Chinese crafts –
think calligraphy, paper cutting, water colour paints – a handful of
which have been in business in some way or another for a few hundred
years. Perhaps the street’s most famous store is Rongbaozhai, a
time-honoured brand which dates back to the 17th century and sells
stationery and calligraphy supplies, as well as high-quality porcelain,
and has a sunny café-bookstore attached. A good one for Beijing
visitors.
Wudaoying Hutong
Best for Jewellery and gifts.
Between Wudaoying’s many accessory shops, home goods stores and cafés, Natooke
is a Beijing go-to for fixed-gear bicycles and biking accessories. In
the middle of the bustling hutong, bright and whimsical boutique Magic Q
offers vintage-inspired dresses and womenswear, and for the actual
vintage goodies, don’t miss Delia,
where shoppers can snag retro sunnies (from 400RMB), shoes and clothing
from labels like Prada, Dior and Céline, as well as well-priced home
goods and postcards.
Qianmen
Best for Beijing souvenirs.
One
of the oldest streets on this list, with a 600-year history as a
commercial centre, Qianmen Dajie is a pedestrianised shopping area just
south of Tiananmen Square. Renovated in time for the 2008 Olympics, Qianmen
is now a commercialised shopping street with a streetcars that run
during Chinese holidays. There's Western high street staples galore
here, but be sure to stop by the original Liubiju Pickle Shop for something more local, or, if you want a break from shopping, Madame Tussauds.
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