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Nanluoguxiang

Dongcheng District, BeijingStreets in Beijing
2016 09 04 Beijing Nanluoguxiang anagoria 23
2016 09 04 Beijing Nanluoguxiang anagoria 23

Nanluoguxiang (Chinese: 南锣鼓巷; pinyin: nánluógǔxiàng) is a narrow alley that gives its name to an old part of the Beijing city centre with traditional architecture both new and old. The neighborhood contains many typical narrow streets known as hutong. It is located in the Dongcheng district.The alley itself is approximately 800 metres (2,600 ft) long, running from East Gulou Street in the north to Di'anmen East Street in the south.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nanluoguxiang (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nanluoguxiang
Huafeng Hutong, Dongcheng District Andingmen (首都功能核心区)

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Wikipedia: NanluoguxiangContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.9425 ° E 116.39638888889 °
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Address

Hoper Bar

Huafeng Hutong 6
100010 Dongcheng District, Andingmen (首都功能核心区)
Beijing, China
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Phone number

call1861743838

2016 09 04 Beijing Nanluoguxiang anagoria 23
2016 09 04 Beijing Nanluoguxiang anagoria 23
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Nearby Places

Great Leap Brewing
Great Leap Brewing

Great Leap Brewing (simplified Chinese: 大跃啤酒; traditional Chinese: 大躍啤酒; pinyin: Dàyuè Píjiǔ) operates four brewpubs in Beijing, two in the Dongcheng District and two in the Chaoyang District. It makes and sells a wide range of beers at those locations, popular both with the city's Western expatriate community and younger Chinese drinkers interested in an alternative product. When it opened in 2010, it was the first microbrewery in Beijing to specialize in craft beers with Chinese ingredients, and the longest-tenured one currently brewing. Founder Carl Setzer and Dane Vanden Berg, another American expatriate working for an information technology company in Beijing at the time, were frustrated by the narrow choice of beers available in the city. With Liu Fang, Setzer's Chinese wife, they began brewing their own in a former siheyuan on a hutong in the city's Nanluoguxiang neighborhood. That location, still open, has been described as "one of the most difficult bars to find in Beijing."Eventually, it expanded to two other locations and began offering a range of up to 40 beers at different times of year, with an infusion of venture capital. Setzer left his job to run Great Leap full-time in 2011. The brewery has focused on using Chinese ingredients in its beers, including Sichuan pepper and Tieguanyin oolong tea, and branding that draws on Chinese history and culture, in a successful effort to attract Chinese consumers looking for an alternative to the country's national brands.