Overview
Giant Pandas & Wildlife
Sichuan Hotpot & Street Food
Tea House Culture & Leisure
Three Kingdoms Heritage & Night Walks
The Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding is the city's marquee attraction — over 200 giant pandas and red pandas in a landscaped bamboo forest habitat where the nursery (baby pandas visible through glass in spring and summer) draws visitors from around the world. Arrive at opening time (7:30 AM) to see the pandas at their most active during morning feeding; by midday they are largely asleep. Beyond the pandas, Chengdu is defined by its food. Sichuan cuisine — numbing Sichuan peppercorn (huajiao) combined with chilli heat (mala) — centres on hotpot: a bubbling cauldron of chilli-oil broth at the table into which you dip thinly sliced beef, tripe, lotus root, mushrooms, tofu, and whatever else your table orders. Mapo tofu, dan dan noodles, kung pao chicken, twice-cooked pork (hui guo rou), and rabbit heads (a Chengdu speciality that baffles outsiders) round out the culinary landscape. The tea house culture is the city's other defining tradition: bamboo chairs under trees, covered porcelain cups of jasmine tea, elderly men playing mahjong, ear-cleaning services, and an afternoon pace that feels anachronistic in a Chinese megacity. The People's Park tea house is the most atmospheric; Heming Tea House nearby dates to the Ming dynasty. Jinli Ancient Street, adjacent to the Wuhou Shrine (dedicated to Three Kingdoms-era heroes), offers a commercially restored but still enjoyable evening stroll with snacks, lanterns, and Sichuan opera mask-changing performances. The Wide and Narrow Alleys (Kuanzhai Xiangzi) preserve Qing-dynasty lane houses converted to restaurants, bars, and boutiques.
Discover Chengdu
7 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.