Public transport offers fascinating view
Following the official inscription of the Beijing Central Axis on the UNESCO World Heritage List on July 27, the summer has seen a surge in citizens and tourists keen to immerse themselves in its historical splendor.
Running for 7.8 kilometers through the heart of the capital, the Beijing Central Axis is comprised of 15 well-known attractions. It starts at the Bell and Drum Towers and leads south through landmark sites, including the Forbidden City, Tian'anmen Gate, and Zhengyangmen Gate. Flanking the axis to the east and west are cultural treasures like the Imperial Ancestral Temple, the Altar of Land and Grain, the Temple of Heaven, and the Altar of the God of Agriculture.
The Beijing Commission of Transport recommends using subway Line 8 or bus No 5 to explore it.
Cao Qiong, who is in charge of the operation and management department of the Beijing Mass Transit Railway Operation Corp Ltd, says that Line 8's design mirrors the central axis by incorporating drawings or patterns of 15 ancient buildings along the central axis into its carriage aesthetic, celebrating the heritage of the area.
Line 8 has 34 stations, with notable stops at Qianmen, Wangfujing, Gulou, Shichahai, Nanluoguxiang and Yongdingmen, that trace the path of the Beijing Central Axis.
"Line 8's north-south orientation is an underground echo of the central axis," Cao says.
Each subway car door is adorned with images of the ancient architecture that exists along the axis, and on the seats there are also paintings or patterns of these famous structures. Even the armrests are decorated with painted landscapes that bring the axis to life.