Shanghai Postal Museum
Address : No. 276 North Suzhou Road, Hongkou District, Shanghai
Address : No. 276 North Suzhou Road, Hongkou District, Shanghai
Opening Hours:
Tuesday to Sunday: 9:00-17:00 (last entry by 16:30); closed on Monday; official holidays excluded.
Introduction:
The Shanghai Postal Museum, originally named Shanghai General Post Office, is a cradle of China’s modern postal services. It is situated in the Shanghai General Post Office Building at No. 250 North Suzhou Road, Hongkou District, close to Suzhou Creek and north of Sichuan Road Bridge. The Shanghai Postal Museum is the first provincial-level museum of the postal industry in China. With a gross floor area of 25,294 square meters, the museum is shaped like the Chinese character 町, with an underground floor and four floors on ground. It is a post-specific iconic building of the eclectic architectural style popular in Europe during the period from the first half of the 19th Century to the early 20th Century. The museum employs modern technology to present its informative historical literature and artifacts and trace the origin and evolution of postal services in China.
*The above information is subject to the official release by the venue, and this platform is for reference only.
Opening Hours
Tuesday to Sunday: 9:00-17:00 (last entry by 16:30); closed on Monday; official holidays excluded.
Introduction
The Shanghai Postal Museum, originally named Shanghai General Post Office, is a cradle of China’s modern postal services. It is situated in the Shanghai General Post Office Building at No. 250 North Suzhou Road, Hongkou District, close to Suzhou Creek and north of Sichuan Road Bridge. The Shanghai Postal Museum is the first provincial-level museum of the postal industry in China. With a gross floor area of 25,294 square meters, the museum is shaped like the Chinese character 町, with an underground floor and four floors on ground. It is a post-specific iconic building of the eclectic architectural style popular in Europe during the period from the first half of the 19th Century to the early 20th Century. The museum employs modern technology to present its informative historical literature and artifacts and trace the origin and evolution of postal services in China.
*The above information is subject to the official release by the venue, and this platform is for reference only.







