Citations:Nanhui New City

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English citations of Nanhui New City

2010s
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  • 2013, Wolfgang Kunth, editor, Terra Maxima: the Records of Humankind[1], Firefly Books, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 366:
    The 20.2 mile (32.5 km) long box girder structure with a central cable-stayed section connects Luchao Port in Nanhui New City in the Pudong New Area of Shanghai with the deep-sea port of Yangshan in Zhejiang Province.
  • 2014, Samuel Kim, John Lim, “Mutual Sharing: Learning and Service”, in Experiencing Asia: Essays from the Asia Leadership Trek[2], →ISBN, →OCLC, →OL, pages 34–35:
    While in Shanghai we also visited the city's future economic engine, its new Free Trade Zone called Nanhui New City, and we gained diverse perspectives of Shanghai’s emerging issues from conversations with leaders in media, education, and the non-profit sector.
  • 2015, Wade Shepard, Ghost Cities of China: The Story of Cities without People in the World's Most Populated Country[3], →ISBN, →OCLC, page [4]:
    A decent portion of Nanhui New City, on the far outskirts of Shanghai's Pudong district, has already been built.
  • 2015 March 30, Daniel Ren, “Polar Ocean Park to join Disneyland at centre of Shanghai's effort to become global tourism hub”, in South China Morning Post[5], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on March 30, 2015, China‎[6]:
    The marine park will cover more than 190,000 square metres and feature 12 exhibition halls, four interactive experience zones and three cinemas.
    It is being built at Nanhui New City, near to the Yangshan deep-water port, part of the city's free-trade zone.
  • 2016 July 20, “New Land Around Shanghai”, in NASA Earth Observatory[7], archived from the original on 31 March 2019[8]:
    The new land has been used in several ways. Parks, farms, and a golf course have sprung up on it. Pudong International Airport has new runaways built on this reclaimed land. Planners even constructed a new city from scratch—Nanhui New City—along the tip of the peninsula. The development was projected to support 800,000 people in residential towers, shopping malls, and a convention center built along circular Dishui Lake.