Daxue Road
Daxue Road (Chinese: 大学路; pinyin: Dàxúe Lù) is a small but historical street in Chengdu, China. The meaning of its name in Chinese is “University Road”, as it was first a road near West China Union University (Chinese: 华西协合大学; now the Huaxi District of Sichuan University; Chinese: 四川大学华西校区) in 1910.
Orientation
Daxue Road is located in the south of Chengdu, running a west–east direction. It begins from South Renmin Road (人民南路) and continues eastward towards Hongxing Road (红星路). The road is about 800 metres (2,600 ft) long and 20 metres (66 ft) wide. 116 phoenix trees (Stercuiia platanitolia) lining the street and divided it into 3 parts, 2 for pedestrian, 1 for cars.
History
In the beginning of 20th Century
In 1905, West China Union Middle School was established as a union intervention of the American Mutual Foreign Mission Society, the Friends' Foreign Mission Association of Great Britain and Ireland, the General Board of Missions of theMethodist Church of Canada, (later the United Church of Canada) and the Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church USA. Then West China Union University opened in 1910 under the same supervision and built according to the plans set out mainly by Fred Rowntree. The Daxue Road was one of the interior roads of the university at that time. Moreover, it was called "Main road to city south gate" and "road to city east gate" as the gateway road of the university to the city. On the north side of the street there were mainly dormitories of university students and staff accommodations of West China Union Middle School and on the south side were the teaching area of university. Along the street there are the Whiting Memorial Administration Building (Chinese: 怀德堂), The Lamont Library and Harvard-Yenching Museum (Chinese: 懋德堂), education offices(not existed today), Religious Room (not existed today) etc.
After the foundation of the P.R. China to the 21st Century
As the mushrooming of urban construction in Chengdu, in 1960, the newly planned South Renmin Road separated the university into two parts. And as the increasing of residence housings built in and around this district, Daxue Road, from an interior university road, gradually became a city street serving for all the citizens. In the 1990s, it was one of the major markets in Chengdu, named as "Daxue Road Market (Chinese: 大学路菜市场)". Between every phoenix tree there was one or two stalls, strengthened to the pedestrian area. The total area of the market reached about 8,000 m2. During the night, there was night market, mobile stalls selling cheap food and small commodities everywhere. Pedestrians, bicycles and cars all went through in the center of the road.
From 2006 to present
In 2006, Chengdu government listed Daxue Road as one of the important reforming Culture Blocks. A new Market building was built and all the former venders had been asked to move in. Buildings along the street had been repainted. Brick walls enclosing the campus had been replaced by iron railings or hedges in order that people walking on the street could see the campus buildings. After this renewal, although on the ground floor of the buildings along this street are mostly small restaurants and groceries, Daxue Road became one of the main transportation roads west–east orientation of Chengdu.
Sightseeing
Along the street there are two buildings listed in the Heritage buildings in Chengdu in 2001.
- The Whiting Memorial Administration Building
The Whiting Memorial Administration Building (Chinese: 怀德堂) was originally the studio of West China Union University (Chinese: 华西协和大学事务所). It was built from 1915 to 1919, designed by British Architect Fred Rowntree, who was also the main designer of the whole campus. It used the inverted arched technology at that time, which was the advanced during that time. Now this building is used as the office building of Huaxi District of Sichuan University.
- The Lamont Library and Harvard-Yenching Museum
The Lamont Library and Harvard-Yenching Museum (Chinese: 懋德堂) finished construction in 1926 and now is used as Campus History Museum of Sichuan University.
References
- "走近华西坝建筑群". 2005-12-22. Retrieved 2018-04-29 – via Wayback Machine.
- http://www.chengdu.com.cn/glamor_chengdu/detail.jsp?id=132035&ClassID=02051001[permanent dead link]
- http://forum.netbig.com/bbscs/read.bbscs?bid=17&id=6915224[permanent dead link]
- "华西坝 一个时代的剪影". Xinhua. 2004-07-06. Retrieved 2018-04-29 – via archive.is.