Features

Heart of redemption

31 May 2015 by Clement Huang

Beijing does monumental grandeur and epic architecture like no other city – it has the world’s largest palace, the world’s largest public square, the world’s most oddly-angled skyscraper. Yet beneath and between the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square and the CCTV Tower are areas that are bereft of hyperbolic characteristics – in fact the hutongs of the Chinese capital are mostly renowned for possessing a scruffy charm and chaotic atmosphere.

These alleyways, where two oncoming cars must perform delicate, wall-hugging manoeuvres to pass, are enclaves of tradition, where families live in self-contained courtyard compounds. The entranceways are generally a haphazard collage of rusting bicycles, sprouting cables, broken furniture, peeling paint and semi-feral cats; venture inside and there is a small cobbled courtyard with sides flanked by individual rooms, where entire extended families eat, chat and sleep.

The rough simplicity of the hutongs – and the fact that they are some of the last remaining neighbourhoods of pre-boom Beijing – make them captivating places to visit. Many hutong homes have already been bulldozed, their occupants not necessarily needing much arm twisting to swap leaking and cold (or hot) hovels for new, high-rise suburban apartments. But plenty remain, including key zones where adventurous entrepreneurs have opened boutiques, restaurants, bars and hotels.

In modern Beijing, it’s possible to stay in a hutong hotel that lies a short stroll from the historical Drum and Bell Tower, or quaff a craft ale in a pub that is a two-minute walk from the Lama Temple and enjoy a gourmet meal in a Tibetan temple compound that dates back to the Ming dynasty.

The man behind the dinky Orchid hotel is Canadian Joel Shuchat. This property is located in one of the more rambunctious hutongs, where the air might be filled with the bellowed sales pitch of a passing knife-sharpener, the clanking of pots and pans at the streetside noodle bar and the loud chatter of the pyjama-clad local residents.

Yet pass through the doors of the Orchid and the mood is one of total serenity. It has 10 luxurious rooms and a rooftop bar-restaurant that is open to the public for lunch and dinner. On a sunny blue-sky day – and Beijing does have plenty of pollution-free spells, contrary to popular belief – there is a magical upper-deck view over the top of squeezed-together hutong homes and towards the heart of imperial Beijing.

“My fascination with the hutongs is the density and the sense of human scale,” says Shuchat. “If I choose to just watch what is around me something ridiculous will happen every time. There is one guy who I noticed the first time when he took out a French horn from his bicycle basket and gave me a toot! He has now upgraded to a proper trumpet and sits on the side of the street in his crappy pyjamas shooting out a few notes.”

The area around the Orchid is also home to other hospitality gems. This was the birthplace of Great Leap Brewing, the city’s pioneer microbrewery, where American Carl Setzer first made his iconic Imperial Honey Ma Gold infused with Sichuan peppercorns, and other pale ales and lagers. 

The original, tricky to find courtyard location still serves pints, although the two newer branches, located close to the Sanlitun nightlife zone, are larger, classier and offer tasty food options.

“I think the original Great Leap is, aesthetically, the one we love the most,” says Setzer.  “[It] was the place that inspired a lot of people to start brewing beer.”

It lies close to the most famous Beijing hutong of all, Nanluoguxiang, a kilometre-long stretch that is lined with bars, boutiques, cafes, restaurants, backpacker hostels and knick-knack shops. Among the gentrification pioneers was long-term resident Dominic Johnson Hill, with his Plastered T-shirt store. Plastered is of course slang for a few too many drinks, and the theme of quirky humour, with a Beijing touch, is central to the entrepreneur’s shtick: retro T-shirts feature Beijing subway maps, army-uniformed ballet dancers, Mao Zedong slogans and even a bottle of the ubiquitous Goldfish washing-up liquid.

“This is the soul of the city, in the hutongs, this is where all the history is,” says Johnson-Hill, who lives in a converted courtyard home. “Here you have a lot of residential, it makes it feel alive.”

A stone’s throw from the main Nanluoguxiang drag is the popular bar-cum-bistro Four Corners, run by Canadian-Vietnamese Jun Trinh. Slightly further afield, on the outer fringes of the Forbidden City, is Temple Restaurant Beijing, sited in a compound that was once used by Tibetan monks to produce scrolls for Ming dynasty emperors. Now, chefs at the venue focus on creating fine-dining European dishes under the watchful supervision of Belgian owner Ignace LeCleir.

 “It is a very unique restaurant, it has a lot of charm and character,” says Lecleir. “It is amazing that you are in the middle of a city of 20 million people and it is quiet. You walk outside and it is so relaxing; you almost feel that you are in a small village.”

The analogy is accurate in terms of the friendly atmosphere – with the important qualifier that the Beijing urban villages are rather larger than the average rural settlement. One of the biggest hutongs of all, Dashilar, lies directly next to the fine-dining restaurant Capital M, at the southern tip of Tiananmen Square. 

The Capital M building, and the surrounding pedestrian precinct, are the faux-imperial creations of modern- day city planners, but the surrounding alleyways are rather less orderly, a mazy collection of crumbling apartment blocks sandwiched next to hole-in-the-wall restaurants, musty book stores, tea shops, renowned and ancient calligraphy supply stores and dusty antique emporiums. 

It’s a marvellous place to wander around before cocktails and dinner at the upscale Capital M, the northern outpost of Australian Michelle Garnaut, famed for opening Shanghai’s first free-standing restaurant, M on the Bund.

Gourmet fare is not, in general, a strong point of the hutong restaurants, partly because of the space constraints. Instead, the proprietors stick to producing simple food well – in the case of Briton Will Yorke that focus has been primarily on upscale pub dishes using fresh ingredients, personally tested recipes, and of course a proper pint of ale.

Yorke, a fluent Chinese speaker, started with the Vineyard Café in Wudaoying hutong and now has a total of five outlets, including a fully fledged micro-brewery out in the suburbs producing ales with names such as Pilgrim’s Progress, Longbowmen, Seeing Double and the Man with the Golden Hop.

The original Vineyard Café encountered major problems before it opened its doors. Yorke and wife Xu Duan spent their savings on converting a traditional courtyard dwelling for restaurant usage, only to find that the entire hutong was earmarked for redevelopment, including their building.

The street ultimately escaped the wrecker’s ball and the Vineyard Café was successful from day one. Other entrepreneurs followed his lead and now Wudaoying is a thriving drag, where the old-style courtyard homes, or siheyuan, have been converted for modern usage. There are Western-style restaurants serving Greek, Spanish and Italian food, and an ever increasing number of boutiques, lifestyle stores and craft shops.

“Everyone thought we were mad and predicted we were going to fail,” recalls Yorke. “But we were relatively young and prepared to work hard on the business. With the new micro-brewery, we have ratcheted it up another level in terms of investment and time.”

The real ales at Yorke’s operations rotate – and can also be found at Stuff’d and the adjoining taproom, situated just off the Wudaoying hutong, and Vineyard by the River, in the northern embassy district, which has a charming rooftop bar. The menus feature pub favourites such as burger and fries, fish and chips, pizza and sandwiches, along with traditional English fare that includes shepherds pie and scotch egg.

Unlike most hutongs, Wudaoying is easy to find, located immediately opposite the Lama Temple, a stunning structure that ranks high on the must see list of iconic Beijing buildings. Within striking distance is yet another cosy hutong establishment serving craft beers, Slowboat tap room. 

It’s a simple but homely place with a wide range of beers that, at any one time, might include Monkey’s Fist IPA, Man-of-War Porter and Dragon Boat Ale. Founder Chandler Jurinka, an American, is proud of the food, particularly the house hamburger, consistently rated as one of the best in the city in local lifestyle magazine polls.

There are plans for a second Slowboat outlet in the Sanlitun nightlife area, which already boasts two Great Leap Brewing pubs along with Jing-A, yet another spot that specialises in serving craft ales. 

Among them is Airpocalypse Double IPA, which has a price linked to the city’s notoriously poor air: when the pollution index goes up, the price goes down. The Jing-A carte rotates regularly, and on any given night might include Workers’ Pale Ale, Chengdu Harvest IPA, Black Velvet Vanilla Stout, Lucky 8 Lager and Guizhou Smoked Chili Porter.

Jing-A is inside a walled former factory compound called 1949 Hidden City, next to the classy Duck De Chine restaurant and across from Okra, where American chef Max Levy rustles up his highly rated Japanese specialities. The gentrification of  buildings such as this – and the conversion of hutong buildings for modern lifestyle usage – demonstrates that there is a realistic alternative to the wholesale demolition of centuries of Beijing architectural history.

The  most impressive example of conversion, though, must be the suburban Factory 798, now the leading art zone in the entire country. The cavernous buildings were once used to produce armaments and electronics until visionary art collector and benefactor Guy Ullens suggested that the high-ceilinged spaces would be perfect for housing large-scale canvasses, giant scuptures and installation works. The Ullens Centre for Contemporary Art (UCCA) was the first large-scale gallery to open there, showing cutting-edge and often controversial art in buildings that are, in themselves, something of a novelty, built in the Bauhaus architectural style.

The provocative art on display at UCCA, and other galleries such as Pace and Long March Space, tests contemporary tolerance boundaries to the limits. There are also scores of smaller galleries dotted around the narrow streets and a decent selection of tiny coffee shops and bars. 

For something more upscale there is the Grace Hotel, within the compound, or close by the East Beijing hotel, where there is a fair chance of bumping into the country’s most notorious artist, Ai Wei Wei, a regular customer in the lively basement bar, Xian.

Another way of exploring the art landscape is to book a trip with Bespoke Travel Company, an outfit that  has organised similar itineraries for celebrity clients. The company has various other options on offer for its customers that focus on the city’s food, culture and history, trips that inevitably involve delving deep into the historical hutongs.

A new – and innovative – way to explore the hutongs is with Beijing Sideways, a company that generally specialises in motorbike-and-sidecar excursions. Their latest offering is hutong tours by electric scooter, a form of transportation that allows access to the very narrowest of lanes. Pedi-cabs also offer whistle-stop (and potentially expensive – negotiate first) tours of the Hou Hai Lake area hutongs.

But if time allows, there is no better way to take in the hutongs than an aimless wander, with a decent map to hand. Nanluoguxiang and its offshoots, the shores of Ho Hai Lake or Wudaoying and its surrounding lanes all have the texture, smell and flavour of Old Beijing, with a slow and measured pace of life that was once the norm in this city, until it opened up to the outside world.


Beijing Sideways

Tel: +86 10 139 1133 4947

www.beijingsideways.com

 

Bespoke Travel Company

Tel: +86 10 6400 0133

www.bespoketravelcompany.com

 

Capital M

3/F, 2 Qianmen
Pedestrian Street

(just south of 

Tiananmen Square)
 

Tel: 86 10 6702 2727

www.m-restaurantgroup.com/capitalm

 

Duck de Chine

Courtyard 4, Gongti Beilu (Behind PCCW building)

Tel: +86 10 6501-1949

www.elite-concepts.com

 

Four Corners

27 Da Shi Bei Hutong

Tel: +86 10 6401 7797

www.these4corners.com

 

Grace Hotel

2 Jiu Xian Qiao Lu,

Tel: +86 10 6436 1818

www.gracebeijing.com

 

Great Leap Brewing (original venue)

Doujiao Hutong 6
 

Tel: +86 10 5717 1399

www.greatleapbrewing.com

 

Jing-A taproom

Courtyard 4 Gongti Beilu 

(Behind PCCW building)

Tel: +86 10 6501 8883

capitalbrew.com

Okra 

Courtyard 4, Gongti Beilu (Behind PCCW building)

Tel: +86 10 6593 5087

okra1949.com

 

The Orchid

65 Baochao Hutong,
Guloudong Dajie 

Tel: +86 10 8404 4818 

www.the orchidbeijing.com

 

Plastered T-shirts 

61 South Luogu Alley

Tel: +86  10  6407 8425; 

www.plasteredtshirts.com

 

Slowboat Brewery
Tap Room

56 Dongsi Batiao

Tel: +86 10 6538 5537 

www.slowboatbrewery.com

 

Temple Restaurant Beijing

23, Shatan Beijie, off WuSi DaJie, 

Tel: +86 10 8400 2232

www.temple-restaurant.com

 

UCCA

798 Art District
4 Jiuxianqiao Rd

+86 10 5780 0200

ucca.org.cn/en/

 

Vineyard Café 
(original location)

31 Wudaoyung Hutong

Tel: + 86 10  6402 7961

www.vineyardcafe.cn

 

Xian

East Beijing hotel

Jiuxianqiao North Rd

Tel: +86 10 8426 0888

www.xian-bar.com/en/

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