Historical Overview
Founded in 998 CE during the Northern Song Dynasty, Ciqikou thrived as a porcelain (ciqi) trading port along the Jialing River. Its prosperity peaked in the Ming-Qing periods, earning monikers like “Porcelain Capital of the Yangtze.” The town declined during the 1937–1945 Chongqing Bombardment but revived post-1949 as a state-owned factory zone. Renovations from 1998–2005 restored its ancient layout, preserving 36 Ming-Qing courtyards. Key events include the 2008 Sichuan Opera Revival Campaign and 2015 UNESCO “Creative City” nomination.
Structural Layout
The town’s 1.25-square-kilometer area follows a hillside-riverside grid:Upper Reaches (Shanchengxiang): Steep alleys with ancestral halls, including the 18th-century Wenchang Palace.
Lower Reaches (Hechengxiang): Flatlands along the Jialing River, home to wharves, teahouses, and the 1940s-style “Old Chongqing” Street.
Key structures include the 15th-century Longevity Temple, the 1920s Folk Customs Gallery, and the 2010-built Porcelain Culture Museum.
Major Attractions
Porcelain Workshop Street: Watch artisans craft “Rongchang Ware” using 12th-century kick-wheel techniques.
Ba Yuxi Teahouse: Sample Chongqing’s “Eight Treasures” tea while listening to Sichuan Opera lianghu duets.
Heng Street: 300-meter pedestrian zone lined with spicy malaxiangguo stalls and embroidered shoe shops.
Han Family Ancestral Hall: Ming-era courtyard with 108 carved wooden panels depicting Confucian virtues.
Jialing River Wharf: Replica 19th-century junks and a bronze statue of 1940s “Dock Workers.”
Folk Art Museum: Exhibits on shadow puppetry, paper-cutting, and the 200-year-old “Ciqikou Puppet Theater.”
Suggested Itineraries
Classic Route (2 hrs): Town Entrance → Porcelain Street → Han Family Ancestral Hall → Ba Yuxi Teahouse → Jialing River Wharf.
Cultural Route (3.5 hrs): Porcelain Museum → Heng Street → Folk Art Museum → Sichuan Opera Performance (2 PM daily).
Night Tour (2 hrs): 6 PM arrival for lantern-lit alleys, riverfront fireworks (weekends), and late-night hotpot at Lao Zhenggong.
Ticket Purchase
Online: Free entry; book workshops (pottery/calligraphy) via Ctrip or Fliggy (¥50–¥150/person).
On-Site: Scan QR codes at town entrances for free admission.
Prices: Free; special exhibits ¥20–¥50 (students/seniors 50% off).
Transportation
Subway: Line 1, Ciqikou Station (Exit 1), 5-minute walk.
Bus: Routes 202, 220, 224, 237, or 808 to Ciqikou Stop.
Taxi: Direct to “磁器口古镇” (Ciqikou Guzhen); avoid rush hour (7–9 AM, 5–7 PM).
Cruise: Yangtze River sightseeing boats dock nearby (transfer via shuttle bus).
Best Time & Tips
Avoid Crowds: Visit Monday–Thursday (weekends host 3x more tourists).
Weather: Morning fog adds atmosphere; evenings cooler for strolling.
Wear anti-slip shoes (cobblestone streets).
Try douhua (tofu pudding) from 1947-era “Chen’s Breakfast” stall.
Photography allowed (drones prohibited).
Prohibited: Smoking, littering, and feeding riverboat dogs.