Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Q&A Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 7,769 Authors
70,454 Quality Articles
& 6,817 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Connor Davidson (5,131)
Joel Hendon (16,285)
Ben Morrish (7,936)
Steve Kovacs (4,545)
Sandra E. Graham (7,883)
Fran Larson (2,271)
David Tanguay (9,577)
Michael Ramzy (633)
Missing Link (766)
E. Raymond Rock (3,068)
Gregory Lewis (1,603)
Nancy Daniels (1,550)
Mark Parsec (15,056)
David Pekrul (3,696)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
The $40,000 Washer/Dryer

Should I use a realtor?

Making Moving Loads Easier

Facing Foreclosure? Is a Recent Job Loss Causing Financial Distress?

Blythewood Neighborhoods: The Fab Five

Can Moving To A Costa Del Sol Property Offer A Solution For The Economic Crisis?

Picking the Right Visa For Your Move to Mexico

Go South Young Man

Renewing or Relocating? a Tenants Rep Can Ease the Pain

When And How To Employ Overseas Moving Companies

Home » Categories » Real Estate » Moving / Relocation » Shanghai For Expatriate Beginners » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

Shanghai For Expatriate Beginners

Rated 2.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Jacqueline Reischel
Submitted Thursday, December 04, 2008
Jacqueline Reischel (19)
enterAsia Information Services
Log in to become a member of Jacqueline Reischel's Fan Club!


There are no two ways about it – Shanghai can seem extremely daunting at first, but after just a few weeks you will feel totally at home. Expatriates enjoy a high standard of living in Shanghai and, if you embrace everything that the experience has to offer, this will be one of the richest and most exciting times in your life.

Most expatriates arrive in Shanghai for the first time via Pudong Airport. This gleaming, light and airy model of efficiency may come as a bit of a surprise to those expecting something a little more second world, but it sure is a reassuring sign of modernity.

Drivers From Hell

Reassuring that is, right up until you are in a rattley, old taxi being hurtled at light speed down the motorway towards town. Although tired from your flight, fear will provide you with the energy to sit up in your seat and clock the way everyone drives, or rather attempts to drive. Cars swerve violently, horns are constantly beeped, no one indicates and there are no seatbelts in the back. It's scary! Oh my, what have you done?!

High-Rise Jungle

As you enter the suburbs on the elevated highway, you will catch the first glimpse of your new city. And it ain't pretty! Shanghai is a vast, high-rise jungle. You will be astonished by the sheer level of building work: the incredible number of building cranes - the way that forests of half-built, high-rise apartment blocks lead off in every direction, stretching endlessly beyond the horizon. But, you will also get your first taste of the ambitions that this city harbours.

Teeming Street Life

Once inside the inner-ring road, traveling at a more subdued speed, you will begin to catch an essence of the bustling, teeming street life. And it is this - not the culturally faceless high-rises - that will give you your first sense of place. You are in China! People are carrying huge loads on bicycles, food is being prepared and eaten by the roadside, it's rich, it's very poor, it's animated, and nothing is familiar. It will seem very foreign but also very exciting.

Shopping For Supplies

So, you've arrived at your new home and everything is in order. Or, at least it's just a phone call to your new landlord away from being perfect, but you need supplies and to run a whole host of errands. Just hop in any taxi and say "Bortaman, Nanjing Shee-lu". The Portman Shanghai Centre on Nanjing XiLu, Puxi, was the first expat hub to be built in Shanghai and, although 15 years old, it has never been usurped as the king of user-friendly convenience for freshly arrived westerners.

Portman Shanghai Centre

There's a City Supermarket selling everything you need including a good deli and wine selection. Plus there's a Starbucks, the popular café Element Fresh, a good cheese and wine shop, a florists, a dry cleaners, a post office, a chemist, a medical clinic, a host of other bars and restaurants, airline ticketing offices, an HSBC bank and several consulates, including that of the UK….it's all here in one place for your ease!

Starbucks Expat MixIt is also at the Shanghai Centre where various groups post information on the notice board in City Supermarket about forthcoming social gatherings. Another way, in the initial days, to meet people is to head to the first floor of Starbucks, opposite Parksons on Huaihai Lu by Shanxi Lu for the Saturday morning (10am) social mixer. A nest of tables is gathered in the centre and you will be made to feel very welcome. You will find very early on, that Shanghai expats are approachable and it will be no time at all before you have more contacts than you ever thought possible.

Shopping Areas

As you become more confident about the geography of the city, your comfort zone will extend to the major shopping areas in Puxi of Huaihai Lu, Nanjing Lu, Xujiahui, and Lujiazui in Pudong. This is to name just a few and, as you can imagine in a city of nearly 20 million with a growing middle-class who like to shop - the list is endless. If you enjoy shopping – Shanghai will be a never-ending voyage of discovery for you.

Jacqueline Reischel is the managing director of enterShanghai.info, an award-winning online Shanghai expat guide. The web site features a Shanghai property search, relocation tips, career guide and other information for expatriates




The author of this article has chosen to make this article available with free reprint rights.
Click here to copy this article.

Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Jacqueline Reischel's Fan Club!

No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

This Article has been viewed 12 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on 12/4/2008 1:46:18 PM.
View other articles written by Jacqueline Reischel (19)


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
Breaking an Apartment or Landlord Lease

Maryville, Tennessee: Still One of the Nation's Best Places to Live

Who To Notify When Moving Home - Checklist

MOVING TO CANADA IS A JOKE...Integrating North America

Moving Home Checklist - Moving In To Your New Home

Will the Panama Real Estate Boom Last?

Make Your Own Home Moving Checklist

Retiring Abroad – 5 Reasons You Should Consider Moving Abroad

Go South Young Man

Living In Cyprus - Surprises and Discoveries

Viewed from Cache. Load Time: 0.031.

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Questions & Answers  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company