Sascha Matuszak relaxes at teatime in a small alley in Chengdu.(China Daily) |
Yet, lying beneath the modern face of the city is "a small-town feeling", said Andrew Barnett, a restaurant manager at the Chengdu branch of the Bookworm bookshop, where he has worked for several months.
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It's a big city with a small- town feeling, very comfortable and hospitable," said the 39-year-old.
The Korean-American restaurant manager has lived in several big cities, including Boston and New York City. Barnett stayed briefly in Hong Kong and Shanghai last year before moving to Chengdu.
"I love big cities," he said. "Chengdu is just another big city where I don't speak the language."
Barnett is among the increasing number of expatriates who are moving to Chengdu amid the city's quickening modernization.
More than 14,000 expatriates from 125 countries and regions now either work or study in the city, and the number keeps increasing, according to the 2012 Chengdu Investment Guide.
Barnett said living in Chengdu is like jogging, and living in Shanghai is like running. He said that doesn't mean the pace of life is slower in the southwestern city, only that people's attitudes in both places differ. In other words, he explained, Chengdu residents are more relaxed.
Busiest line in Beijing: Subway line 10 has reached a daily transportation of 1 million passengers on average