Home > Tourism> Beijing
> Beijing and Its Metropolitan Area
Beijing
Beijing and Its Metropolitan
Area
Beijing is an independently administered
municipal district of about 16,810 sq
km (6,490 sq mi). It comprises ten urban
districts and eight predominantly rural
counties. The urban districts include
four dense city districts and six suburban
districts. The suburbs are growing rapidly
as new institutional, industrial, and
residential buildings are constructed,
converting agricultural land to urban
uses. The eight rural counties continue
to provide basic grain, vegetables, fruits,
building materials, and water supplies
to the city. However, significant industrial
growth has also occurred in these areas,
namely in the outlying towns of Shijingshan,
Tongxian, Fengtai, and Fangshan.

Beijing city Area |
The city proper consists of two older
sections in the center of the city and
new outlying residential, industrial,
and institutional areas built mainly after
1949. The old section includes a square
inner city on the north constructed between
1409 and 1420, and a rectangular outer
city to the south built between 1521 and
1566. Once encircled by a wall about 24
km (15 mi) long and about 15 m (50 ft)
high, the inner city has at its core the
Forbidden City. Between 1421 and 1912,
this was the walled palace and inner compound
of China’s imperial family and was
so named because ordinary citizens were
not allowed inside. It was the most sacred
space in traditional, imperial China.
The complex, now housing the Palace Museum
(founded in 1925), was opened to the public
in 1949. Beyond the Forbidden City was
the Imperial City, which contained government
offices, temples, gardens, palaces, and
parks. Outside the Imperial City were
upper-class homes, markets, and more temples.
The adjacent outer city, once encircled
by a wall about 23 km (14 mi) long, shared
the northern part of its wall with the
inner city. The outer city contained important
temple areas and residential space for
the commoners.
In accordance with traditional Chinese
town planning, Beijing was designed along
a north-south central axis; this line
represented the imperial authority and
it ran through many key government offices,
buildings, imperial residences, and main
gates. After the Communist revolution
in 1949, most walls of the old city were
demolished and replaced with thoroughfares.
However, several of the old gates have
been preserved. During the 1950s Tiananmen
(the Gate of Heavenly Peace, also known
as Tian’an Men), located along the
city’s north-south axis south of
the Forbidden City, was rebuilt and its
square to the south was enlarged to hold
crowds for parades. Major installations
were added in and around Tiananmen Square,
including the Great Hall of the People,
built in 1959, where the national legislature
meets. Several blocks east of the Forbidden
City and Tiananmen Square is Wangfujing
Avenue, the city’s most famous shopping
district.
|