Wujiang

Wujiang is a small city (1.5 million) located about 20 km south of downtown Suzhou on the shore of Lake Tai. Administratively, it is a county-level city within the prefecture-level city Suzhou.

TongLi township

Understand

Get in

Line 4 of the Suzhou Metro reaches Wujiang. Take the southeast fork of the "Y" shaped Line 4, terminating at Tongli Station. From the tourist desk at Tongli Station, one may buy a ticket to see the town that includes a round-trip shuttle bus and entrance to all the major historical sites within.

Get around

TongLi waterway

Once inside Tongli, the streets are narrow and only suited for walking. However, one may buy a boat ride to see the city from the water.

TongLi official site in English.

See

Retreat and Reflection Garden

Wujiang includes the water towns Tongli and Zhen Ze, very picturesque with many canals, bridges and old buildings. These were formerly market towns for surrounding agricultural areas and are now doing quite well as tourist attractions, mainly for Suzhou people wanting to escape the pressures of the big city.

Tongli has the Retreat and Reflection Garden, the only one of the nine Suzhou classical gardens on the UNESCO World Heritage List located outside downtown Suzhou.

Zhen Ze is a historical town with a river running through the center. The old buildings are still occupied by residents. 1-hour walk from the East End to the West End of town. Things to see are the Ci Yun Pagoda and temple ¥10, Shi Jian Tang, Yu Ji Bridge (qiao), and Shi Fan Bridge (qiao). The tomb of astronomer Wang Xiao An is located in a museum in Zhen Ze Middle School at the West End of town. Entrance fee is ¥5.

Do

Buy

Eat

Drink

Sleep

Connect

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gollark: Although, to be fair, humans can talk about theirs, so I guess they apparently still have *some* effect on the world.
gollark: I don't think it's a relevant question. Digital systems can simulate analog ones to any desired degree of precision, if possibly slowly.
gollark: Given that consciousness/qualia/whatever is/are *subjective* experience.
gollark: There's not really a way to know what digital systems subjectively experience in response to stimuli.
gollark: Qualia are subjective experience. I do not see how you could possibly know this.
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