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Framing urban memories

A young photographer retraces China's millennium-era skylines, sparking collective nostalgia and optimism through architecture, Chen Meiling reports.

By Chen Meiling | China Daily | Updated: 2025-11-22 09:39
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Liu photographs old buildings from decades ago, including hotels, office buildings, and supermarkets, as a way of looking back on his childhood. These photos earn him fans on social media platforms. LIU YUJIA/FOR CHINA DAILY

Spiritual refuge

Dou Donghui, an associate professor at the School of Sociology and Psychology at the Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing, says the renewed affection for millennium-era architecture reflects a shared yearning among young people for certainty, warmth, and hope, and more importantly, "a spiritual haven from anxiety, a way to connect with others, and distance themselves from mainstream aesthetics".

These buildings evoke what many remember as a golden age. As iconic products of China's rapid urbanization, these buildings are backdrops of young people's growth and micro-carriers of the broader story of "national prosperity and improved family life". Today, they function as cultural symbols of optimism and a predictable future, he says.

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