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Comments(7) Add Your CommentOct 29, 2009 By Andrea Hunt, www.eChinacities.com
Ah Beijing, Beijing…a place that many of us expats know and have come to love. For all of us who call this wondrous and chaotic city our home, we also claim our favorite residential areas of the city as well. Each district of Beijing is distinct so choosing a place to live can be difficult. It’s hard to say which location is best for expats to live because everyone is so convinced that their area is the best. For those moving here, or thinking of changing the locations of their humble abodes, we have put together a list of the Top 5 preferred locations by Beijing expats.
When trying to find an apartment in Beijing, start by researching the area: consider location, price, and proximity to the subway. An hour long commute to work in the morning can put even the most cheery of morning people into a fluster as they sit in traffic in a taxi on the 2nd ring or are smashed into a subway car with the rest of Beijing. Remember that Beijing is bigger than it looks on a map. If you work in Guo Mao, weigh the benefits and disadvantages of that perfect apartment that you found in Wudaokou, which will inevitably result in an hour or more commute in the morning.
To help you decide where to live we have asked various expats who live in Beijing. According to them, here is a quick breakdown of the top 5 most popular areas with expats living in Beijing:
1) Guo Mao and the Central Business District
The CBD gloats in all its new architecture and the new CCTV tower looms impressively over Chaoyang’s Central Business District, home to Jian Wai SOHO and Guo Mao. Many new and a bit more pricy apartments are here within a short subway ride of many Western company high-rise buildings. The whole area has a very metropolitan city feel and it’s as if you can see for yourself how China has opened itself up to the world when looking around the area at the towering Western companies and enormous Chinese banks. Expats like the convenience of the Wal-Mart there and also the Jenny Lou’s foreign food store.

Photo: CobbleCC
2) Sanlitun:
The area around Sanlitun, is lined with smaller buildings, both Chinese and Western restaurants, and with the newly constructed bustling Village area finished before the Olympics, it provides ample shopping choices and culinary delights. It’s a great place to walk around and many people who initially move here never leave. There are Western grocery stores like April Gourmet and Jenny Lou’s and tailors behind Ya Show Market. The Village has lots of restaurants and shops as well. Probably one of the most popular and lively districts in Beijing because of several hot areas for young professional expats, Sanlitun aims to provide a bit of everything. It’s lively, central and conveniently located in proximity to other areas like Guo Mao and Gu Lou.

Photo: Andrea Hunt
3) Gu Lou/Llama Temple:
The areas around Gu Lou and Llama Temple carry visions of “Old China,” with intricate alleys of hutongs, fruit vendors, and elderly men playing cards. The hutongs of Beijing carry a distinctive Chinese feel far away from the modernity and commerce of newly constructed Beijing. This area is best known for Houhai, a scenic but touristy hot spot, and numerous home-style Chinese restaurants and hip bohemian tiny bars on Nanluoguxiang, where Beijing’s counter culture drinks coffee and drinks beer from hutong bar rooftops in warmer months. Hutongs vary greatly in size, quality, and price but for many, the romantic image of the hutong garden in the summer amongst labyrinth alleys leave many expats remembering why China had lured them there in the first place.
I don't even know why you included shunyi it's so far out of the city!? only the rich expats live there.
I hear you about Shunyi but a lot of people do live there - especially the ones with kids and buckets of cash and drivers to chauffeur the kiddies into town where the international schools are
it is true, there are so many of those here. I think downtown and the real beijing is better. Those people don't really live here!
Guo mao lcoates in the CBD. No people live there. Soho, Guo mao and the like are marvelous offices that you, mundane people, want to live. the rest places are just places it is convient for you to shopping, see a doctor, or entertainment. But, those places you can find in many area, like zuojiazhuang around dongzhimen. why dont you move to hongkong, taiwan? you love to rank people! hongkong people , taiwanese is ranked in the top here by you.
Most expats live in WangJing. Stop thinking of the western world as the only source of "expats".
Looking for nice condo near local high school