On the banks of the Huangpu River in Shanghai, there is a small road, surrounded by old buildings, carrying the past years, it is Huangpu Road. Huangpu Road is located in Hongkou District, Shanghai, east-west direction, west-famous road, east-to-east Qingpu Road. It is less than 500 meters long. The route was built by the Shanghai Public Concession Ministry Bureau in the middle of the 19th century, and it is named because it is located on the north bank of the Huangpu River. Huangpu Road was originally only a fiber road from the Suzhou River into the north bank of the Huangpu River mouth. It was built as a road in 1848, and the road on the riverside was originally named "Yangzijiang Road", so the road on the north bank of Suzhou Riverside was called "North Yangzijiang Road". Later, people found that the river here is not the Yangtze River but its tributary, the Huangpu River, so the Yangtze River Road was changed to Huangpu Road, later known as Huangputan Road, that is, today's Bund; the North Yangtze River Road has been known as Huangpu Road. Facing the river on the side of the river, Huangpu Road has a big advantage of shipping, plus the area is more deserted, close to the old city, and it is especially convenient to enter and exit the city; precisely because of these location conditions, various countries have built consulates in this place, so it is also known as Shanghai's "Dongjiaomin Lane". According to the addresses of consulates of various countries contained in the 1911 "Zilin Line Record", there were 14 foreign consulates in Shanghai at that time, and 10 of them were in today's Hongkou area. In addition to Germany, the United States, Japan, Russia, there are also the consulates of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Danish Consulate and other countries. (See Figure 6: From the Internet) In 1852, the Hamburg Consulate (formerly the German Consulate) was established on Huangpu Road, which was the earliest consulate in the North Bund area. (See Figure 7: From the Web) From 1914 to 1916, Russia built its own consulate on the east side of the German Consulate. The overall building incorporates Baroque and German Renaissance styles and elements. (Figure 8) Huangpu Road 106, is the former site of the Japanese Consulate in Shanghai, the original north and south of a red building, in 1941, a red building to the north was rebuilt into a gray building. (Figure 9, 10) No. 15 Huangpu Road is the former site of Pujiang Hotel, formerly Licha Hotel, and is the first Xishang Hotel in Shanghai since the opening of Shanghai and even the country, known as "Huaxia's first store". (Figure 11) Now on this road, the world living room carries the elements of the new era, feeling the trend of the new benchmark of urban development in the new era of the North Bund.