Shangyu's urban center, Baiguan, is located where the
Cao'e River flows out of the hilly area that makes up more than half of the county, into flat alluvial land bordering
Hangzhou Bay. This river, and the
Cao E Temple () next to it, are named after a fourteen-year-old girl who became famous in 143 AD for her filial devotion. She died in the river trying to retrieve the body of her father (Cao Xu) who drowned while officiating at a ceremony in honor of
Wu Zixu who himself was famous for his
filial piety. Baiguan is about east of Shaoxing's urban center. The railroad from
Hangzhou to
Ningbo passes through Baiguan, and the new superhighway between Hangzhou and Ningbo skirts Baiguan. Within Shangyu, just northwest of Baiguan, the Hangzhou-Ningbo highway (mostly east–west) intersects with a superhighway that goes south to the seacoast and then down the coast, through
Wenzhou and
Fuzhou, all the way to
Guangzhou. In the name "Baiguan" () "bai" means "hundred" and "guan" means an imperial civil service official. The city came to be called this when it became famous for producing many scholars who became officials by passing the imperial civil service examination. ==Culture==