
Since the mid-20th century, the number of Beijing hutongs has dropped dramatically as they are demolished to make way for new roads and buildings. More recently, some hutongs have been designated as protected areas in an attempt to preserve this aspect of Chinese cultural history.
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Hutong Robot
The chronicles of a robot ... Hutong Robot. blog. 中文. chinese. gadgetry. robot vocabulary ... New blog post: Hutong: a definition http://hutongrobot.com/?p ...www.hutongrobot.com/Beijing Visitor Blog Beijing & China Blog: Hutong
Hutong ... Some hutong districts have been conserved however, such as those around the Drum ... Read this blog in a different language. Games. Beijing Visitor ...beijingvisitor.blogspot.com/2006/09/hutong_18.htmlSilicon Hutong
Silicon Hutong, and it's sister blog Peking Review - soon ... noticed a bit of an increase in activity on the Hutong of late. ... Up on Tracking Chinese Blogs ...homepage.mac.com/dwbmbeijing/iblog/SiHu/index.htmlSilicon Hutong: Apple's bi-polar China disorder
In the Hutong To breakfast, or not to breakfast 0936 hrs. So here is the deal. ... Silicon Hutong: A "Model Worker Blog" for 2008 | Main | Ex Post Mortem Olympicus " ...siliconhutong.typepad.com/silicon_hutong/2008/08/apples-bi-p...Laowai Interview: David Wolf of Silicon Hutong | Lost Laowai China Blog
We continue our series of posts interviewing some of the more prolific laowai ... LLW: How did your blogs, Silicon Hutong and Peking Review, come to be? ...www.lostlaowai.com/blog/2009/01/08/laowai-interview-david-wo...
Since the mid-20th century, the number of Beijing hutongs has dropped dramatically as they are demolished to make way for new roads and buildings. More recently, some hutongs have been designated as protected areas in an attempt to preserve this aspect of Chinese cultural history.
Historical hutongs


In the Ming Dynasty (early 15th century) the center was the Forbidden City, surrounded in concentric circles by the Inner City and Outer City. Citizens of higher social status were permitted to live closer to the center of the circlesFact: date=August 2008. Aristocrats lived to the east and west of the imperial palace. The large siheyuan of these high-ranking officials and wealthy merchants often featured beautifully carved and painted roof beams and pillars and carefully landscaped gardens. The hutongs they formed were orderly, lined by spacious homes and walled gardens. Farther from the palace, and to its north and south, were the commoners, merchants, artisans, and laborers. Their siheyuan were far smaller in scale and simpler in design and decoration, and the hutongs were narrower.Fact: date=August 2008
Nearly all siheyuan had their main buildings and gates facing south for better lighting; thus a majority of hutongs run from east to west. Between the main hutongs, many tiny lanes ran north and south for convenient passage.Fact: date=August 2008
Historically, a hutong was also once used as the lowest level of administrative geographical divisions within a city in ancient China, as in the paifang (牌坊) system: the largest division within a city in ancient China was a fang (坊), equivalent to current day precinct. Each fang (坊) was enclosed by walls or fences, and the gates of these enclosures were shut and guarded every night, somewhat like a modern gated community. Each fang (坊) was further divided into several plate or pai (牌), which is equivalent to a current day (unincorporated) community (or neighborhood). Each pai (牌), in turn, contained an area including several hutongs, and during the Ming Dynasty, Beijing was divided into a total of 36 fangs (坊).Fact: date=August 2008
However, as the ancient Chinese urban administration division system gave way to population and household divisions instead of geographical divisions, the hutongs were no longer used as the lowest level of administrative geographical division and were replaced with other divisional approaches.Fact: date=August 2008
Hutongs in the modern era
At the turn of the 20th century, the Qing court was disintegrating as China's dynastic era came to an end. The traditional arrangement of hutongs was also affected. Many new hutongs, built haphazardly and with no apparent plan, began to appear on the outskirts of the old city, while the old ones lost their former neat appearance. The social stratification of the residents also began to evaporate, reflecting the collapse of the feudal system.Fact: date=August 2008

























