Yangpu Park is a large-scale comprehensive park with elegant greening layout and novel facilities, and is known as the "Little West Lake" in Shanghai. The park is located at No.369 Shuangyang Road, and 1958 was completed and opened. The park is modeled after the landscape design of West Lake in Hangzhou, focusing on the water surface. The whole park is divided into five tourist areas: Discovery Park, Central Park, Animal Park, Playground and Gardens in Gardens. There are 152 varieties and 27945 trees and shrubs planted in the garden, which are arranged in layers according to the seasons and colors of the plants. There are also Songhe Pavilion, Xiangyuan Pavilion, Yuchun Pavilion, Mushroom Pavilion, Monkey Pavilion, Fish Gallery, Waterfront Pavilion, Scaffolding, Flower Beds, Six Stone Bridges and Temporary Bridges. Plants, rockeries and stalagmites have different styles and architectural shapes, forming small scenes, forming trees and flowers, rockery waterfalls and bridges.
Jiangwan stadium
Jiangwan Stadium/KLOC-0 was completed in August, 934, and/KLOC-0 was completed in August, 935. It was designed by Dong, a famous architect in China. 1936' s "Shanghai yearbook" said: "Jiangwan Gymnasium is great in architecture and wide in scope, and its position in the gymnasium is almost unparalleled in the Far East." Chen Yi wrote Jiangwan Gymnasium. Jiangwan Gymnasium was the main building of the "Great Shanghai Plan" launched by the government of the Republic of China at that time. This plan is a comprehensive and systematic urban plan to build modern Shanghai (excluding the concession) with Jiangwan (now Wujiaochang area) as the center. The plan consists of four major construction projects: political area, transportation facilities, peripheral industrial residential area and road system.
Jiangwan sports recreation park
Jiangwan Sports and Leisure Park is built on the original site of Jiangwan Stadium, surrounded by Songhu Road, Lizheng Road, Guohe Road and Zoumatang River, covering an area of about 15 hectares. The main building is an oval stadium that can accommodate 40,000 people, a gymnasium that can accommodate 3,500 spectators and an indoor swimming pool that can accommodate 5,000 spectators. The walls of the three stadiums are all clear water red bricks and cut fake stones. When designing these buildings, Dong, a famous architect in China, creatively built the northwest gate of the stadium into a magnificent arched building, supplemented by cornice beams and columns, and adopted traditional Chinese sculptures such as moire, flame and lotus patterns, while the stadium stands were built with western-style arches and corridors.