Xīhúlóu Jiǔjiā

Changsha


About 9km northeast of the city centre, the world’s biggest Chinese restaurant, according to the Guinness World Records and a plaque on the wall, is a village of five kitchens, staff of 1000, and banquet halls, stages, courtyards and gardens to entertain 5000 guests. The picture menu is a textbook on regional cuisines, plus there’s an alley of street food.

Take bus 810 from the Wanjiali Plaza metro stop.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Changsha attractions

1. Hunan Provincial Museum

3.47 MILES

Changsha's main attraction is this modern museum. There's a special focus on the Mawangdui Tombs, which were excavated nearby in the early 1970s,…

2. Lieshi Park

3.7 MILES

Tree-shaded and dotted with lakes, leafy – and incredibly huge – Lieshi Park is very popular in the mornings for singing, dancing and taichi.

3. Changsha Municipal Museum

4.03 MILES

A colossal aluminium/magnesium alloy statue of Mao Zedong, cast in Heilongjiang, affably greets you at the entrance. This is the first clue that, despite…

4. Kaifu Temple

4.17 MILES

This large and active temple in the north of town dates originally to the Five Dynasties period, with many additions during later dynasties. The imposing…

5. Old City Walls & Tianxin Pavilion

5.04 MILES

The old city walls, which once stretched for 9km around ancient Changsha, were built of rammed earth in 202 BC, reinforced with stone in AD 1372 (during…

6. Tangerine Isle

5.57 MILES

The most famous of the city’s parks is a 5km-long sliver of an island smack bang in the middle of the Xiang River. A reflective 32-year-old Mao…

8. Yuelu Mountain

6.32 MILES

This large park on the slopes of Yuelu Mountain makes a pleasant city break. You can climb to the top in less than an hour, or else go up on the chair…