Hongkou District, Shanghai, China | Free Entry | Architecture, Photography, Cafes
Year Built: 1933
Total Area: 32,500m²
300+ Concrete Columns
Entry Cost: Free
1933 Old Millfun sits in Hongkou District, not far from the Bund. It started life as the Shanghai Municipal Council Slaughterhouse in 1933. At the time, it was one of the three largest slaughterhouses in the world. British architect Balfours designed it, using concrete imported entirely from the UK. The building cost over 3.3 million silver dollars to construct.
After years of abandonment and occupation by squatters, renovation began in 1998. Today it operates as a creative hub for art, cafes, fashion, and events. Atlas Obscura called it “the last remaining of its design in the world,” and that holds up. There is nothing else quite like it in Shanghai or anywhere else.
The building is designed on the Chinese concept of “the earth is square and the sky is round.” A circular 24-sided core sits inside a square outer building. Over 300 umbrella-shaped columns hold up the entire structure without any internal beams. The outer walls are 50cm thick and hollow, a design that naturally keeps the interior cool in summer without air conditioning.
Unit 1-203. Specializes in Shanghai and Cantonese dishes made from beef, a nod to the building’s original use. Popular with locals.
Unit 1-105. French-style desserts and coffee. A solid stop after walking the upper floors.
An industrial-style cafe inside the complex. Good for a break after shooting the architecture.
Food inside the complex is priced for tourists. If you are on a budget, eat before you arrive. The building itself is free.
| Address | 611 Liyang Road, Hongkou District, Shanghai (虹口区溧阳路611号) |
| Metro | Line 4 or Line 10 to Hailun Road Station, Exit 2, then a 10-minute walk |
| Entry | Free. Individual shops, cafes, and events charge separately. |
| Hours | Generally open during daytime hours. Most venues run 10am to 9pm. |
| Time needed | 1 to 2 hours for a full walk-through |
| By taxi | Show the driver 虹口区溧阳路611号. DiDi works well in this area. |
| Nearby | Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum (10-minute walk), the Bund (15-minute taxi) |
1933 Old Millfun is not the most famous stop on a Shanghai itinerary. That is the point. You get a rare piece of 1930s industrial architecture, a quiet creative space, and one of the best photography locations in the city, all for free.
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