Shanghai Club Building
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The Shanghai Club Building was a three-storey neo-classical building in Shanghai along The Bund. The structure is now empty.
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[edit] Structure
The original Shanghai Club was a three-storey red-brick building constructed the British in 1861. The club was rebuilt in 1905[1].
The original Club was torn down and rebuilt in 1910 with reinforced concrete in a neo-classical design. The large first floor dining room had black and white marble flooring, while the entrance staircase used imported white Sicilian marble.
[edit] History
The club was a British men's club and was the most exclusive club in Shanghai during the heyday of the 1920s and 1930s. The membership fee was $125 and monthly dues were $9.
United States President Ulysses S. Grant was hosted there when he visited Shanghai in 1879.
The second-floor was famous for the "Long Bar." This was an unpolished mahogany, L-shaped bar that measured 110.7 feet by 39 feet. On one side of the bar was a smoking room and library, while on the other side was a billiards room. It was famous for being the world's longest bar at one time[1].
There were also forty guest rooms on the second and third floors. It later became the Dongfeng Hotel, and even suffered the indignity of housing a KFC restaurant from 1990 to 1996.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b Jackson, Beverley. [2005] (2005). Shanghai Girl Gets All dressed up. Ten Speed Press. ISBN 1580083676
[edit] External links
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