A wide seafront plaza built around a 30-metre red spiral — the city's modern icon — backed by a wall of CBD towers that turn into a giant light show once the sky goes dark. Free, open at any hour.
Picture this: you are standing on a broad plaza beside Fushan Bay at six in the evening. In front of you is a fiery-red steel spiral as tall as a ten-storey building, glowing against a sky turning orange and purple. Behind it rises a row of CBD towers, and beyond that the sea, where yachts are moored at the Olympic Sailing Center. In a few minutes the sky will go fully dark — and the towers around the bay will start lighting up together, in rhythm.
That is May Fourth Square (五四广场) — a public plaza of around 100,000 square metres on Fushan Bay in Qingdao's Shinan district, and the face of the city's modern side, the opposite of the red-roofed German old town across town. The municipal government building sits to the north, the sea to the south, and at the centre stands the sculpture everyone comes to photograph.
What makes the square special is simple: it is free and open 24 hours — no ticket line, no closing time. Locals and visitors come for the same reasons: to stroll the waterfront, to photograph the red spiral, and to wait for the evening light show.
Everything here is within walking distance around Fushan Bay — start at the red spiral and work your way toward the sea.
The star of the plaza — a fiery-red steel spiral 30 metres tall, 27 metres in diameter and weighing more than 500 tons. It was built to commemorate the May Fourth Movement of 1919, whose roots are tied to Qingdao, and it gives the square its name. The coiled form suggests wind spiralling upward, a nod to energy and vitality. It is regarded as the largest steel urban sculpture in China, and it is the photo everyone takes.
After dark, the towers ringing Fushan Bay turn into a giant screen — full-building LED displays running patterns and colour in sync with music. It is said to be one of the largest coastal light shows in northern China, typically staged around 7:30–9:00 pm in summer and on holidays (timing and frequency shift by season). The best vantage point is the waterfront facing the towers, or further along toward the Olympic Sailing Center where the whole bay lights up at once.
From the main plaza a seafront path runs in both directions. Head east and it is about a 15–20 minute walk to the Olympic Sailing Center, passing Lover's Dam (情人坝) — a stone breakwater jutting into the sea that locals love for an evening stroll. It is an easy, breezy walk with yachts and the city skyline in view the whole way.
The eastern endpoint of the bay — the marina that hosted the 2008 Olympic sailing events, with the Olympic flame tower, rows of yachts, and a waterfront promenade that is a favourite spot for the light-and-drone show. If you have the time, walk over from May Fourth Square and finish here in the evening to see modern Qingdao end to end.
The "May Wind" sculpture is Qingdao's signature image, and everyone comes here to shoot it. The classic angle is to step back so the full spiral cuts against the sky, or shoot from behind so the sea and the CBD towers fill the frame. At sunset the light turns warm and the red of the sculpture is at its most vivid.
For crowd-free shots, come on a weekday morning or afternoon — holiday evenings get very busy, especially in summer when Qingdao is a top seaside getaway for domestic travellers.
This is the evening highlight. Once the sky is fully dark, the towers around the bay run LED displays in sync with music — typically around 7:30–9:00 pm in summer and on holidays (timing and frequency vary by season, and weekdays off-season may have no show). Stand on the waterfront in front of the plaza, or walk toward the Olympic Sailing Center to fit the whole bay into one frame.
During some festivals there is an added drone show. Check the schedule ahead with your hotel or local notice boards, since the timetable changes with events.
From May Fourth Square, follow the seaside path east for about 15–20 minutes to reach the Olympic Sailing Center, the marina that hosted the 2008 Olympic sailing. On the way you pass Lover's Dam reaching out into the sea, with a cool breeze and yachts filling the bay. It is one of the most rewarding evening walks in the city, especially if you time it with the light show.
If you want to get out on the water, the Olympic Center runs yacht trips around the bay for an extra fee — a view of Qingdao from mid-water that you cannot get from shore.
The metro is the easiest option, dropping you right beside the plaza.
This district is all sea and CBD towers; the red-roofed old town sits across town, an easy metro ride away.