Mittwoch, 13. Februar 2013

Walking in Beijing

Beijing is surprisingly unpleasant to walk.

Every metro has 4 exits, and you’ll be damned if you take the wrong one. You can’t just walk back into the metro, for that will cost you a fee. And streets are very nearly uncrossable, almost everywhere. You best cross only on traffic lights. The light that the traffic light shows is of no importance; but near traffic lights, the traffic is slow enough to attempt a crossing.

Here’s an example. We live around 70 meters away from the platforms of the Beijing north railway station. But as you might be able to make out in the picture, the station has no exit in our direction. It has only one exit, in the top left of the picture.

photo-2013-02-13-11-55.JPG

To get from the station to our hotel (where the picture was taken), you walk along the top edge of the picture to the right, for over a kilometer, walk around a subway stop, and then walk to our place, for a total of 2 kilometers.

Dienstag, 12. Februar 2013

Temple of Earth

During the Chinese New Year, we got caught in two crowds already. The video below is the Temple of Earth. There, it was empty enough so I dared move my hands for a second to shoot the short clip.


It’s hard to feel the numinous there. I’m vaguely reminded of our visit at the pantheon. There, it was not only the number, it was also the constant sound of a shutter, that forbade any feeling of numerous. At the pantheon, it hurt me more than elsewhere, because it is, in a way, the temple of secularists, of us. It was built for all religions, which is to say: for none.
IMG_0052-2013-02-12-22-39.jpg
IMG_0053-2013-02-12-22-39.jpg

View Larger Map