Wuhan, China

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Wuhan is China's great river city — a sprawling metropolis of three former cities (Wuchang, Hankou, and Hanyang) straddling the confluence of the Yangtze and Han rivers, where the Yellow Crane Tower has watched over the waterways for 1,800 years and the morning breakfast culture revolves around hot-dry noodles eaten while walking.

Yellow Crane Tower & Literary Heritage

One of China's four great towers, celebrated in Tang-dynasty poetry, overlooking the Yangtze from Snake Hill — 1,800 years of literary and architectural tradition.

Hot-Dry Noodles & Breakfast Culture

Reganmian eaten walking to work, doupi crepes, summer crayfish season, Jiqing Street night food, and the most passionate breakfast city in China.

Cherry Blossoms & East Lake

Wuhan University's hillside campus in bloom, East Lake's 100km greenway, the Moshan cherry garden, and China's largest urban lake — spring in Wuhan is a national event.

Treaty-Port Architecture & River Crossings

Hankou's colonial Bund, Jianghan Road heritage buildings, the historic First Yangtze Bridge, and cross-river ferries connecting a three-city metropolis.
Travel Overview

Wuhan is three cities in one. Wuchang, on the south bank of the Yangtze, holds the Yellow Crane Tower (Huanghe Lou), one of China's four great towers, perched on Snake Hill overlooking the river — rebuilt multiple times since its original construction in 223 AD, the current structure (1985) commands the classic Wuhan panorama. Wuhan University's hillside campus, designed in the 1930s with Chinese palace-style rooftops, erupts in cherry blossoms each March-April, drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors in a two-week frenzy. East Lake (Donghu), at 33 square kilometres nearly six times the size of Hangzhou's West Lake, provides a green lung with lakeside cycling paths, the Moshan Hill scenic area, and a greenway system that has become a model for Chinese urban parks. Hankou, on the north bank, was one of China's major treaty ports — the former concession districts (British, French, German, Russian, Japanese) preserve a stretch of colonial architecture along Yanjiang Avenue (the Bund of Wuhan) that rivals Shanghai's in scale if not in fame. The Jianghan Road pedestrian street and the Jiqing Street food night market are Hankou's commercial and culinary centres. Hanyang, the smallest of the three, holds the Guiyuan Temple (a Chan Buddhist monastery with 500 arhat statues, each with unique expressions) and the Qingchuan Pavilion facing the Yellow Crane Tower across the river. Wuhan's breakfast culture (guozao) is legendary — the city eats more varieties of morning food than perhaps any city in China, with hot-dry noodles (reganmian) as the undisputed king.

Discover Wuhan

The Yellow Crane Tower (Huanghe Lou), one of the four great towers of China celebrated in Tang-dynasty poetry, stands on Snake Hill on the Wuchang bank of the Yangtze. The original was built in 223 AD as a military watchtower; the current reconstruction (1985) is a five-storey, 51-metre structure in traditional Chinese style that has become Wuhan's defining landmark. The tower's fame rests largely on Cui Hao's Tang-dynasty poem ("Where the yellow crane once soared, now only the tower remains") — considered one of the finest Chinese poems ever written, it established the tower as a symbol of loss, memory, and the passage of time. The surrounding park includes memorial stones inscribed with poems by Li Bai and other literary figures who visited the original tower. The views from the top floor — the Yangtze flowing below, the First Yangtze Bridge spanning the river, the Wuhan skyline spreading across three districts — encapsulate the city's river geography.

Diplomatic missions in Wuhan

3 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.