Trade Shanghai's city centre traffic for 100 kilometres of open lakeside cycling on this full-day road bike adventure to Dianshan Lake (Shanghai's largest freshwater lake, the city's “West Lake”) and the lesser-known Yuandang Lake on the Jiangsu border. Return transport is on a licensed tourism bus that loads your gear and rental bikes — just turn up at the Shanghai meeting point at 07:45 with your daypack and energy snacks.
After a 90-minute ride out of the city, the group rolls into Zhujiajiao, a 1,700-year-old water town where you'll be sized for your bike, fitted with a helmet, and walked through a clear safety briefing. From there it's onto the dedicated lakeside greenways — over 60 percent of the route is on car-free paths designed for cyclists, so you can settle into a steady pace and look up at the open water instead of watching for traffic.
The morning takes you through quiet villages and along the Taipu River before stopping in Jinze, an ancient canal town that survived 1,300 years of trade traffic without ever giving in to tour buses. You'll picnic by a Song-dynasty bridge, refuel, and then push on into the afternoon loop around Yuandang Lake, the dam-built reservoir on the Shanghai-Jiangsu line, and the long, scenic eastern shore of Dianshan with its purple iris fields, wooden boardwalks, and water birds.
By 17:30 you reach the final viewpoint for sunset photographs over the lake before reboarding the bus back into Shanghai, arriving by around 19:00. The full route is approximately 100 kilometres; the path is mostly flat, gentle, and well surfaced, but the distance and pace mean this is best for cyclists with at least basic endurance — riders 18 to 60 in normal health who can stay on the saddle for five to six hours.
Included in your booking: return licensed tourism bus from the Shanghai meeting point, professional staff support and driver throughout, briefing and route guide, commemorative tour badge, and bike-friendly bus storage. Bike rental (with helmet) is included; you can also bring your own bike for a small handling fee. Lunch is self-catered or picnic-style in Jinze.