The Hague's Chinatown is located in the city centre, on the Wagenstraat.[1] The entrances of the neighbourhood are marked with two Chinese gates, described as "three meters high with sculptured dragons winding around the pillars and overhead ornate panels of red, gold and blue."[2] Chinatown borders the Spui in the north east, the Bierkade in the south east, the Pavilioensgracht in the south west, and the Gedempte Burgwal in the north west. Important streets in the area include the Wagenstraat (車仔街) and the Sint Jacobsstraat (聖雅各街).
Chinatown, The Hague | |||
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Chinese | 海牙唐人街 | ||
Literal meaning | The Hague's Chinatown | ||
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The area was originally a Jewish quarter. After the Second World War, the neighbourhood grew vacant and impoverished. After a revamp by the municipality in the 1970s, the area became increasingly inhabited by Chinese people. Today, the city government of The Hague actively promotes diversity when compared to another Dutch city of Amsterdam and has claimed that "ethnic tourism" has risen in the city.[3] Another source claims that The Hague's Chinatown is "... an attempt to draw together the Dutch and Chinese identities at work in the area."[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Chinatown District". Archived from the original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved 2013-08-31.
- ^ "Chinatown in The Hague".
- ^ Jan Willem Duyvendak; Frank Hendriks; Mies van Niekerk (2009). City in Sight: Dutch Dealings with Urban Change. ISBN 9789089641694.
- ^ Marco de Waard (January 2012). Imagining Global Amsterdam: History, Culture, and Geography in a World City. ISBN 9789089643674.