(green steepled building), formerly known as Sassoon House, one of the most famous buildings on the Bund The Bund houses 52 buildings of various architectural styles, generally
Eclecticist, but with some buildings displaying predominantly
Romanesque Revival,
Gothic Revival,
Renaissance Revival,
Baroque Revival,
Neo-Classical or
Beaux-Arts styles, and a number in
Art Deco style (Shanghai has one of the richest collections of Art Deco architectures in the world). From the south, the main buildings are: •
American Club at
209 Fuzhou Rd – General Claire Chennault, then executive director of China Post 1, used the premises until 1948. Built by
László Hudec of Curry & Co. between 1923 and 1925 in the American Georgian Style. Originally built as an all-male club after purchasing the site in 1922, it was a popular club for expatriates. A six-story building plus basement, around 1000m2 per floor, designed in the common steel and concrete construction prevalent along The Bund area of Shanghai. Containing bars,
billiard room and 50 bedrooms there was also a rooftop garden. •
Asia Building (No. 1, The Bund), originally the McBain Building, housed the Shanghai offices of
Royal Dutch Shell and
Asiatic Petroleum Company. •
Shanghai Club (No. 2, The Bund), which was the principal social club for British nationals in Shanghai. Since 2010 the
Waldorf-Astoria Shanghai Hotel. •
Union Building (No. 3, The Bund), previously housed a number of insurance companies, and is now a shopping centre. • The
Mercantile Bank of India, London and China building (No. 4, The Bund), housed the
Mercantile Bank of India, London and China, built between 1916 and 1918. •
Nissin Building (No. 5, The Bund), housed a Japanese shipping company. •
Imperial Bank of China Building (No. 6, The Bund), housed the first Chinese-owned bank in China, and is now
HSBC's Shanghai branch. •
Great Northern Telegraph Building (No. 7, The Bund), housed
Great Northern Telegraph Company. Site of the first telephone switch in Shanghai in 1882. • (No. 9, The Bund), currently housed the
China Merchants Group, also houses the Shanghai flagship store for
Dolce & Gabbana. • The
HSBC Building (No. 12, The Bund), now used by the
Shanghai Pudong Development Bank, was once the Shanghai headquarters of the
Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, which failed to reach a deal with the Shanghai government to buy the building again in the 1990s, when the Shanghai government moved out of the building that they had used since the 1950s. The present building was completed in 1923. At the time, it was called "the most luxurious building between the
Suez Canal and the
Bering Strait". Its famous ceiling mosaics have been fully restored, and can be viewed inside the entrance hall. • The
Customs House (No. 13, The Bund), was built in 1927 on the site of an earlier, traditional Chinese-style customs house. The clock and bell was built in England and in imitation of Big Ben. •
China Bank of Communications Building (No. 14, The Bund), was the last building to be built on the Bund before the founding of the People's Republic. It now houses the Shanghai Council of Trade Unions. •
Russo-Chinese Bank Building (No. 15, The Bund) is now the
China Foreign Exchange Trade System (CFETS; previously Shanghai Gold Exchange). •
Bank of Taiwan Building (No. 16, The Bund) is now the China Merchants Bank. •
North China Daily News Building (No. 17, The Bund) housed the most influential English-language newspaper in Shanghai at the time. Today it houses AIA Insurance. •
Chartered Bank Building (No. 18, The Bund) housed the Shanghai headquarters of what became
Standard Chartered Bank the building now houses designer shops, the restaurant
Mr & Mrs Bund, and a creative exhibition space. HQ of
Chipolbrok Chinese-Polish shipping company (1962–1998). •
Palace Hotel (No. 19, The Bund), today forms part of the
Peace Hotel. •
Sassoon House (No. 20, The Bund), with the attached
Cathay Hotel, was built by Sir
Victor Sassoon. It was, and still is today, famous for its
jazz band in its cafe. The top floor originally housed Sassoon's private apartment. Today, it forms the other part of the
Peace Hotel. •
Bank of China Building (No. 23, The Bund) housed the headquarters of the
Bank of China. The stunted appearance of the building is attributed to Sassoon's insistence that no other building on the Bund could rise higher than his. •
Yokohama Specie Bank Building (No. 24, The Bund) housed the Japanese Yokohama Specie Bank until 1945, today housed a Shanghai branch of the
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. •
Yangtze Insurance Building (No. 26, The Bund) today houses a Shanghai branch of the
Agricultural Bank of China. •
Jardine Matheson Building (No. 27, The Bund) housed the then-powerful
Jardine Matheson company. Today it houses a Rolex store on the ground floor, offices, and the House of Roosevelt, a bar and restaurant. •
Glen Line Building (No. 2 East Beijing Road) today houses the
Shanghai Clearing House. •
Banque de l'Indochine Building (No. 29, The Bund) housed the French bank,
Banque de l'Indochine. •
Consulate-General of the United Kingdom (No. 33, The Bund) housed the Consulate-General of the
United Kingdom. The building has been renovated and in 2010 re-opened as No. 1 Waitanyuan, a private dining facility for government. Part of the site has also been used to build the Peninsula Hotel, Shanghai which opened in 2010. •
Gutzlaff Signal Tower also known as the Bund Weather Tower, originally provided weather information to ships on the
Huangpu River with the current structure dating from 1907. •
West Bund Art & Design (
Chinese: 西岸艺术与设计博览会) hosts an annual international
contemporary art fair held
Shanghai,
China during November. •
The Water House ==Transport==