BEIJING HUTONGS (SLUM AREAS) IN CHINA
Hutong (slum) in the old city of Beijing, China. Electricity is provided through overhead wires on poles. Electrical meters are fixed on a beam atop.
In this hutong (slum) number of small houses are inside this main door
In China nowhere roadside shops are seen like in India. But in this Beijing hutong (slum) this is a shop on the roadside for repairing and setting the punctured tubes of the cycles. People, some with cigarettes between the lips, are waiting for the repair of their bicycles.
Beijing's hutongs (slum areas) are narrow streets with small houses. They date back to the Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties. These are with families, vendors of street food, the coal for heating. Some houses are preserved or restored. Many slums were bulldozed for modern development. Hutong means well with water originally popped up around water sources. Some hutongs like Nanluoguxiang are narrow lanes packed with shops, bars, and rickshaws. Others are calm and less commercial. Old men playing chess, kids running around, laundry hanging out. Motorcycles are used for conveyance. Public toilets in hutongs are conventional type with single piece metal. Toilets in China are mostly conventional type. Hutongs are maintained by Beijing Municipality. They are clean with all facilities.



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