If you’re landing in Chongqing in 2026, prepare for your GPS to have a mental breakdown. This isn’t just a city; it’s a vertical labyrinth where your “ground floor” hotel lobby might actually be on the 22nd floor of a cliffside complex. I’ve spent months navigating these literal ups and downs, and while getting lost is part of the charm, knowing where to drop your bags is the difference between a great trip and a 30,000-step nightmare.

1. Jiefangbei (解放碑): The Neon Ground Zero

This is the Chongqing you’ve seen on TikTok—the Cyberpunk heart. It’s loud, it’s flashy, and it never sleeps.

Jiefangbei

2. Guanyinqiao (观音桥): Where the Locals Actually Shop

If Jiefangbei is for tourists, Guanyinqiao is for the “cool kids” of Chongqing.

3. Daping (大坪): The “Accidental” Hub

I’ll be honest: I once spent forty minutes trying to find the exit of the Times Paradise Walk mall in Daping. It’s a five-building mega-complex that has its own gravity.

4. Shapingba (沙坪坝): Student Prices & High-Speed Rail

This place is a landmark: China’s first true high-speed rail TOD project. At Jinsha Paradise Walk, the “train-through-a-building” magic happens on B2, where the Chengdu-Chongqing high-speed line slices right through the complex. It’s a chaotic, beautiful nexus where bullet trains, subways, taxis, and buses all collide in a vertical stack.

However, there’s a catch. The “Urban Core”—the soul of the design meant to tie all these layers together—is still a work in progress. When I did my field research here for a TOD design course, neither of the two “Urban Cores” was finished. Right now, subway commuters still have to “borrow” the transit paths originally designed just for the high-speed rail station.

We haven’t yet seen the full “Shibuya-inspired” vision: that seamless, frictionless link between the high-speed rail, the mall, and the city streets. I’m still waiting for the day Jinsha Paradise Walk finally hits its final form.

Home to the city’s major universities, this area has a gritty, energetic soul that’s much kinder to your wallet.

Why is Chongqing crawling with “Paradise Walks”?

You’ll notice it everywhere you go: the “Paradise Walk” (Tianjie) logo. If it feels like Chongqing is built on top of a Longfor mall, that’s because, in a way, it is. This is the birthplace of Longfor, the real estate giant that essentially taught China how to integrate shopping malls with transit.

Here’s the deal: Longfor didn’t just build malls; they mapped out the city’s expansion. From the OG North Paradise Walk in Guanyinqiao to the massive TOD at Shapingba, these “Paradise Walks” aren’t just shopping spots—they are the urban anchors of every major district. If you want to understand why Chongqing’s commerce flows the way it does, you have to look at the “Paradise Walk” phenomenon.


2026 Traveler Checklist

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