Xizhimen: Difference between revisions

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{{See also|Xizhimen Station|Beijing North Railway Station}
[[File:Image xzm 02.jpg|thumb|The old Xizhimen gate]]
[[File:Image xzm 02.jpg|thumb|The old Xizhimen gate]]
[[File:Xizhimen.Building.JPG|thumb|Office Building over Xizhimen Subway Connection]]
[[File:Xizhimen.Building.JPG|thumb|Office Building over Xizhimen Subway Connection]]

Revision as of 13:58, 27 May 2012

{{See also|Xizhimen Station|Beijing North Railway Station}

The old Xizhimen gate
Office Building over Xizhimen Subway Connection
Subway #2 at Xizhimen

Xizhimen (Chinese: 西直门, : Xīzhímén; Manchu: Tob wargi duka) was formerly a gate in the Beijing city wall and is now the name of a transportation node in Beijing. The gate formerly was the entrance of drinking water for the Emperor, coming from the Jade Spring Hills to the west of Beijing. The gate itself was demolished in 1969.

Transport

The 2nd Ring Road currently links with Xizhimen Outer Street, which has recently been transformed into a city express road, linking the western 2nd Ring Road via Beijing Zoo to the 3rd Ring Road. A triple-arched highrise building is a noticeable landmark at the intersection.

Line 2, Line 4 and Line 13 of the Beijing underground railway network all stop at Xizhimen Station. However, these stations were previously not connected, but a new transfer passage with escalators was recently opened for direct transfers between the two Lines. Line 13 has its western terminus at Xizhimen.

The Beijing North Railway Station is in the Xizhimen area.

A bridge is named after the region (Xizhimen Bridge). The bridge has a northern connection bridge built in the late 1970s. It will be removed and be replaced soon. The main Xizhimen Bridge, built also in the 1970s, once stood a rather frightening 5.5 m (it was then, and still is now, for the record, the tallest bridge on the 2nd Ring Road) and had three layers, with the top layer acting as a roundabout. Demolition of the old central bridge took place in 1999 by means of structural removal instead of a major bridge explosion. It was replaced with a series of new bridges which bear no resemblance to the old bridge.

References

External links