1. Singapore

Singapore’s  Chinatown, once home to the first Chinese settlers in what’s now a  heavily Westernized city-state, is one of its few distinctly Asian  neighborhoods. The enclave was home to the area’s earliest Chinese  settlers. Several of its institutions, such as the Heritage Centre, Food  Street, and Night Market, preserve the culture of its original  inhabitants, while some areas of the district are designated national  heritage sites. Many historic buildings remain as relics of the past, as  well as to complement the otherwise modern landscape. More after the  break...
We  have compile a list of most colorful Chinatowns in the world. Take a  look at the some wonderful photos of these world’s  great Chinatowns.  Please feel free to drop your comments.
2. Melbourne 

Melbourne  boasts the oldest Chinatown in the world, established during Victoria’s  Gold Rush in 1854. Catch the world’s longest Chinese dragon– the  Millennium Dai Loong Dragon tops 100 meters — in action as it is brought  to life by 200 people during the Chinese New Year parade.
3. Kuala Lumpur

The  capital of Malaysia was actually founded by Chinese tin prospectors in  the 1850s, who played a pivotal role in the city’s transformation from a  jungle settlement to a center for the tin mining industry. The Chinese  remain the city’s dominant ethnic group and control a large proportion  of the country’s commerce. Chinatown, known locally as Petaling Street  or Jalan Petaling, is famous for its food stalls and night market, where  shoppers can load up on fresh produce and counterfeit DVDs, watches and  purses (don’t forget to haggle).
4. Georgetown, Penang, Malaysia

Arriving  in Georgetown, Penang, off the west coast of Malaysia after a long  journey from Thailand, you may almost think that you accidentally  traveled all the way to China. The city’s Chinatown is one of the  largest and best preserved in the world, with everyday sights and sounds  reminiscent of a small city in China. Most residents are descended from  Chinese immigrants who arrived in Penang during the colonial era and  made their fortunes as traders and shopkeepers. Many of their original  shops are still intact today.
5. Toronto

In  the most ethnically diverse city in the world, residents have their  pick of seven Chinatowns. The city’s main Chinatown was formed in the  late 1960s, when many businesses in the original Chinatown were forced  to move. Since the 1980s, the Greater Toronto Area’s Chinese community  has migrated to the suburbs of Scarborough, Mississauga, Richmond Hill,  Markham, and North York, where shopping centers are reminiscent of Hong  Kong’s malls and street stalls.
6. New York

New  York’s first Chinese residents began arriving in Manhattan’s Lower East  Side in the late 19th century to escape discriminatory measures on the  West Coast. In the 1980s, the neighborhood eclipsed San Francisco’s as  the largest Chinatown outside Asia. But don’t overlook the city’s other  Chinese enclaves – in Elmhurst and Flushing in Queens, and along Avenue U  and 8th Avenue in Brooklyn. In fact, Flushing’s Chinatown has now  surpassed Manhattan’s in size.
7. Vancouver

There’s  a reason this city has been nicknamed “Hongcouver.” In the years  leading up to Hong Kong’s 1997 handover to China, waves of wealthy  immigrants flooded the city. The mayor, Sam Sullivan, even speaks  Cantonese. Vancouver’s Chinatown dates back to the early 20th century,  although recent arrivals have headed for the suburb of Richmond, where  many of the Chinese restaurants are considered the best outside of Hong  Kong.
8. San Francisco

The  city’s Chinese New Year parade, an annual event since the 1860s, is the  largest Asian cultural celebration outside of Asia. Chinatown may seem  like a tacky tourist trap, but one cannot ignore the history and  significance of one of the world’s best-known Chinese quarters, once the  stomping grounds of Sun Yat-Sen and Amy Tan. The original enclave,  built in the 1850s by settlers who had arrived during the gold rush and  railroad days, would be the world’s oldest had it not been destroyed in  the 1906 earthquake. Since the 1960s, much of the city’s Chinese  community has moved into the Sunset and Richmond districts, while newer  immigrants often settle in the suburbs around the Bay Area.
9. Yokohama, Japan

Yokohama  Chinatown is the largest throughout Asia, in developing the environment  when the Port of Yokohama was opened to foreign trade in 1859 because  many of the Chinese traders and settled here. The roads and streets of  Chinatown is marked by nine flashy colors, but the gate was found at  all.
10. Bangkok, Thailand

Bangkok  Chinatown is famous just as Yaowarat or Sampeng, after the strolling  nearby, Bangkok’s Chinatown is as old as the city itself. In the late  1700s, as a young Bangkok city expanded, Chinese merchants were asked to  move. They settled here near the river where they have since that time  will be quick to this point. The tourists will be fast to show the  “Traimit Wat temple”, which the largest houses gold Buddha, weighing in  more than five tons. Do not miss the great shopping opportunities,  especially the items on display in the old Chinese pharmacy.
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