-
Advertisement
China

A cup of nostalgia at timeless Chinese teahouse

In a nation bristling with modernity and coffee shops, Chengdu’s iconic Quanyin Pavilion teahouse has barely changed since the Cultural Revolution

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A customer enjoys a stretch under a Mao portrait still in its original position at the Guanyin Pavilion teahouse in Chengdu. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

At 4am the kettles crackle on a charcoal stove as regulars crowd inside an ancient Chinese temple turned teahouse, a relic in a country being overrun by Starbucks cafes.

Wearing a cap and a blue vest, Li Qiang gets up in the middle of the night, as he does every day, to light the fire and prepare portions of tea in tiny cups that can be purchased for a modest two yuan (HK$2.25) each.

Li Qiang prepares kettles at the century old teahouse he manages in Chengdu. Photo: AFP
Li Qiang prepares kettles at the century old teahouse he manages in Chengdu. Photo: AFP
Advertisement

Outside the Guanyin Pavilion teahouse, named for the goddess the temple was once dedicated to, elderly men chat as they wait for the 300-year-old building’s large wooden doors to open.

Inside, decorations from past eras are visible in the shadows: religious frescoes and motifs on high beams, dating from before it was converted just over a century ago.

Advertisement

Lower down, decaying paintings on wooden panels depict Communist China’s founder Mao Zedong surrounded by solar rays, or slogans glorifying socialism and hoping for the Great Helmsman’s longevity.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x