
One of Beijing's new team of official pedicab drivers waves to a colleague, as he takes his passengers on a hutong tour near Shichahai Lake on Monday.
Tourists hoping to take a trip around Beijing's famous hutong can
look forward to a more professional service from now on, the local
tourism bureau said.
With effect from Monday, all tours of the
city's Shichahai Lake area are now operated by officially franchised
operators, it said.
About 300 new pedicabs - sporting dark red
roofs and copper inlays - hit the streets of Beijing this week under
the control of a team of licensed drivers, uniformly dressed in
traditional Chinese shirts.
The cabs are operated by five
local travel firms, which won the franchise rights following a bidding
contest held earlier in the year.
Only licensed drivers are permitted to conduct such tours.
Liu
Jun, an official with the Xicheng district tourism bureau, said the new
system is designed to provide a better service for tourists as well as
more protection for the local environment.
In the past, hutong tours were often criticized for their poor quality, Liu said.
Drivers
would ask passengers for tips, provide only scant information about
interesting sites and even change the routes, he said.
To monitor the new service, a complaints hotline will be set up soon, he said.
Sydney Shapiro, 93, who lives in a hutong near Shichahai Lake, said he welcomes the move.
"In
the past, the pedicabs went too fast; they were dangerous. Also, they
often parked in the entrances to people's homes or in the narrow lanes,
which was a nuisance for residents," Shapiro, an American writer and
naturalized Chinese, told China Daily.
"I hope the move will
help Shichahai maintain its peace and charm," Shapiro, who has
campaigned for many years for more supervision of the pedicabs, said.
The new hutong tours cost 35 yuan (5 U.S. dollars) per hour, slightly more than the unsupervised ones, Liu said.
Tourists
have a choice of five routes around Shichahai, which comprises three
manmade lakes - Qianhai, Houhai and Xihai - he said.
In the future, pedicab drivers will also be expected to learn English and will be given lessons in etiquette, he said.
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