Comparison
GB · United Kingdom

Greater London

8,899,375 residents51.52°, -0.10°
CN · People's Republic of China

Harbin

10,009,854 residents45.75°, 126.63°

Greater London and Harbin, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
8,899,375
10,009,854
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
1,569.237
53,076.48
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
—
no data
150
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Greater London high low Harbin high low
Greater London vs Harbin monthly temperature-5°0°5°10°15°20°25°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
11.3
—
no data
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
708.2
—
no data
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Greater London

Living in Greater London feels like being inside a huge, constantly moving system: there is always another line, another neighborhood, another crowd, and another thing happening somewhere else. The city is intensely multicultural and opportunity-rich, but the tradeoff is that everyday life can be expensive, crowded, and a bit exhausting to manage. People who settle in tend to build their lives around their specific borough or commute corridor, because crossing the city can take real time and planning. At the same time, London rewards curiosity: if you like museums, food from everywhere, late-opening venues, and the sense that every part of the world is represented, it can feel endlessly stimulating.

Common complaints
  • Cost of living5
  • Crowding and transit friction4
  • Pace and stress3
  • Weather gloom3
  • Distance between neighborhoods2
Common praises
  • Multicultural energy5
  • Things to do4
  • Career and education opportunities4
  • Public transport coverage4
  • Neighborhood variety3
Harbin

Harbin feels like a northern provincial capital where the cold shapes the whole rhythm of life. People live with a strong local identity, a visible Russian-influenced city center, and the yearly ice-and-snow festival that puts the city on the map, but most days are more about practical routines than tourism. Winters are serious and can be a constant topic of conversation, while the warmer months likely feel like the city finally opens up again after a long freeze. For someone living there, the appeal is probably the distinctive character, winter spectacle, and regional food, balanced against the reality of a harsh climate and a city that gets less international attention than China’s bigger hubs.

Common complaints
  • Severe winter cold1
  • Limited source material / low visibility online1
  • Seasonal dependency1
Common praises
  • Distinctive local identity2
  • Winter spectacle2
  • Regional food culture1
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Greater London
Food

London’s food scene is one of its strongest everyday pleasures: you can find excellent South Asian, Middle Eastern, Caribbean, East Asian, West African, Eastern European, and British food within a few stops of each other. Eating out ranges from cheap takeaway and market lunches to high-end tasting menus, but the biggest draw is often that good casual food is easy to find if you know your neighborhood. Boroughs like Soho, Shoreditch, Brixton, Dalston, Southall, Wembley, and Greenwich each have their own food identity, and markets play a big role in lunch and weekend eating. Quality can be uneven and prices are high by many standards, but the city’s range and authenticity are hard to match.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Greater London is broad rather than uniform: there are big clubs, tiny pubs, warehouse parties, live music rooms, comedy nights, queer venues, late bars, and restaurant-heavy evenings that run very late. Different areas serve different crowds, from central tourist-heavy zones to more local, neighborhood-based scenes in places like Peckham, Dalston, Camden, Brixton, and Soho. A lot of social life still starts in pubs or at restaurants before moving elsewhere, and the best nights often depend on knowing a particular scene rather than just heading downtown. It can be expensive to drink and get home, but the payoff is that there is usually some event or venue for almost any taste.

Harbin
Food

Harbin’s food scene is likely centered on hearty northeast Chinese cooking: filling portions, wheat-based staples, dumplings, stews, and the kind of dishes people eat to survive cold weather. The city’s Russian influence also shows up in some bread, pastry, and dairy traditions, which makes the local food identity feel a little different from inland Chinese cities. In everyday life, the best-known appeal is probably not fine dining but warm, substantial comfort food that fits the climate.

Nightlife

There is not enough direct Reddit material here to describe a dense nightlife scene with confidence. Based on Harbin’s size and climate, nightlife probably skews toward bars, KTV, restaurants, and seasonal socializing rather than a huge late-night club culture. Winter tourism may add some special-event energy, but ordinary weeknights are likely calmer than in China’s biggest coastal cities.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Greater London
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

Statistically, London is not an extreme-weather city, but locals often describe it as grey, damp, and overcast for long stretches. The rain is usually more drizzle and drizzle-adjacent annoyance than dramatic storms, and the real complaint is often the lack of bright, reliably warm days rather than any severe cold or heat. Summers can be pleasantly mild but sometimes feel brief, while winters are more about darkness and wetness than snow. In everyday conversation, the weather is less a crisis than a persistent mood setter.

Harbin
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, Harbin’s weather is often summarized by its famous cold, but lived experience is more extreme and more defining than any stat sheet suggests. Locals are likely to describe winter not as a novelty but as a long operational reality: dry air, heavy coats, frozen sidewalks, and a city that has to work around the cold. That said, the climate is also part of the city’s pride, because the same conditions that make winter hard are what create the ice-and-snow culture the city is known for. Summer probably feels especially welcome because it breaks up the severity of the season and gives residents a real sense of relief.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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