Tue, August 05, 2008

Beijing Underground City

2008-07-18 08:07:46 GMT2008-07-18 16:07:46 (Beijing Time) Xinhua English

Beijing Underground City

For more than 20 years, Beijing's Underground City, a bomb shelter just beneath the ancient capital's downtown area, has been virtually forgotten by local citizens, despite being well-known amongst foreigners since its official opening in 2000.

The Underground City has also been called the Underground Great Wall, since they had the same purpose: military defense. This complex is a relic of the Sino-Soviet border conflict in 1969 over Zhenbao Island in northeast China's Heilongjiang River, a time when chairman Mao Zedong ordered the construction of subterranean bomb shelters in case of nuclear attack.

The tunnels, built from 1969 to 1979 by more than 300,000 local citizens and even school children, wind for over 30 kilometers and cover an area of 85 square kilometers eight to eighteen meters under the surface. It includes around a thousand anti-air raid structures.

To supply construction materials for the complex, centuries-old city walls and towers that once circled ancient Beijing were destroyed. The old city gates of Xizhimen, Fuchengmen, Chongwenmen and others remain in name only - only two embrasured watchtowers from Zhengyangmen and Deshengmen survived.

In the event of attack, the plan was to house forty percent of the capital's population underground and for the remainder to move to neighboring hills, and it is said that every residence once had a secret trapdoor nearby leading to the tunnels.

Address:

No.62, West Damochang Street, Qianmen, Chongwen District

Opening Hours:

9:00 to 16:30

Admission Fee:

RMB 20

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