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Citations:Sijhih

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English citations of Sijhih

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010s 2020 2021 2022 2023
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
汐止國泰綜合醫院
Sijhih Cathay General Hospital
汐止分行
SIJHIH BRANCH
  • 2003, Taiwan Business Topics[1], volume 33, American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 41, column 1:
    In one recent case, three parties all worked together to clean up a mountain of household garbage where the Bureau of High Speed Rail plans to build a repair and maintenance base for its trains on a 64-acre site in Sijhih City outside of Taipei.
  • 2003, Julie Ju et al., editors, A Brief Introduction to Taiwan[2], Government Information Office, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 118:
    The 106-kilometer section between Hsinchu and Sijhih of this new 11 7-kilometer freeway was opened to traffic in 1997, and the entire line was completed in 1999.
  • 2004, Taiwan Yearbook[3], Government Information Office, →OCLC, pages 221, 222:
    To relieve congestion along the section of the freeway running through Taipei, two 21 kilometer-long elevated viaducts have been constructed that run parallel with the Sun Yatsen Freeway from the Sijhih (汐止) interchange in the north to the Wudu (五堵) interchange in []
    The Second North Freeway, which is the main section, extends from Sijhih to Hsinchu, with a 6-kilometer-long Taipei connecting route and a 12-kilometer-long inner beltway to the CKS International Airport.
  • 2005 July 20, American Institute Taiwan, TYPHOON HAITANG SLAMS TAIWAN[4], WikiLeaks (United States diplomatic cables leak), 05TAIPEI3073, page [5][6]:
    By all accounts, the system worked as planned and the cities of Wudu and Sijhih were spared significant flooding as a result.
  • 2006, Taiwan Business Topics[7], volume 36, American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 30, column 2:
    In the Taipei area, the government recently completed the Keelung River Yuanshanzih Flood Diversion Tunnel to stop flooding around Sijhih. Housing developments built on slopeland in Sijhih had destroyed the hydrological balance in recent years, causing heavy loads of sediment to wash down into the river and reducing much of its drainage capacity.
  • 2006 February, Wei-Hsien Teng, Ming-Hsi Hsu, Chung-Hsing Wu, Albert S. Chen, “Impact of Flood Disasters on Taiwan in the Last Quarter Century”, in Natural Hazards[8], →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 7:
    On July 18th, 2000, a heavy rainfall occurred in the upstream watershed of Pachang Creek and induced a rapidly huge flow peak. Unfortunately, 4 professional hydraulic workers were flushed away. Three months later, Sijhih was inundated again by Typhoon Xangsane and nearly 2/3 of the urban area was flooded. Respectively, Cidu District and Nuannuan District in Keelung City suffered catastrophic floods, which caused 64 casualties, 65 injured, 25 disappearance and inestimable loss of agriculture, fishery and property.
  • 2007 November, Dipal Khatri, “Ice Skating/Hockey”, in Eva Huang, transl., Taiwan Fun Magazine[9], archived from the original on 03 December 2007[10]:
    Another option for ice skating in Taipei is the public skating rink at Husky Ice Palace in Sijhih. Although the rink is smaller than the one in Taipei Arena, it is suitable for ice hockey and figure skating.
  • 2008, Li-ling Huang, “Taipei — Post-industrial Globalisation”, in Gavin W. Jones, Mike Douglass, editors, Mega-Urban Regions in Pacific Asia: Urban Dynamics in a Global Era[11], Singapore: NUS Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 221–222:
    The core is Taipei Municipality and includes the 12 districts of Beitou, Shihlin, Neihu, Jhongshan, Wanhua, Songshan, Datong, Daan, Sinyi, Nangang, Wunshan, and Jhongjheng. All residents are classified as urban. The inner ring crosses the boundaries of three cities and counties. It covers the seven wards of Keelung City (Jhongshan, Jhongjheng, Sinyi, Renai, Anle, Nuannuan and Cidu), a few more urbanised townships within Taipei Prefecture (Danshuei, Sijhih, Shidian, Jhonghe, Yonghe, Banchiao, Tucheng, Shulin, Shingjhuang, Sanchong, Lujhou, Wugu, Taishan, and Yingge); Taoyuan City, Jhongli City, Gueishan, Bade, and Pingjhen townships of Taoyuan Prefecture.
  • 2008, Jack Williams, Ch’ang-yi David Chang, “Back from the brink: resolving Taiwan's environmental problems”, in Taiwan's Environmental Struggle: Toward a Green Silicon Island[12], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 108[13]:
    That programme, begun in the early 1990s, cost billions of Taiwan dollars, but eventually tamed the river, especially because of the Yuanshanzih flood diversion tunnel (sluiceway), which helps redirect run-off from the upper reaches of the river to the sea on the north-east coast, thus saving the often flooded townships of Rueifang and Hsichih (Sijhih)⁷ when future typhoons and heavy rains hit the area.
  • 2009, P-C Kuo, J-Y-S Lin, L-C Chen, Y-T Fang, Y-C Cheng, H-Y Wu, C-Y Tsai, Y-S Chen, S-Y Lin, C-L Wu, Q-D Ling, “Molecular and immunocytochemical identification of coxsackievirus A-24 variant from the acute haemorrhagic conjunctivitis outbreak in Taiwan in 2007”, in Eye[14], volume 24, →DOI, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 132, column 1:
    During October 2007, an epidemic of AHC occurred in Taiwan. Cases were first noted in the northern areas of Taiwan, including Keelung city, and Yunlin county. Within the next few days, the disease spread to Sijhih, a city in Taipei county south of Keelung, and Taipei city.
  • 2013 June 6, “One Set of Drums, Six Years and Still Going - Love for Music Endures at Majia Junior High School in Pingtung Taiwan Amidst Adversity”, in 行政院莫拉克颱風災後重建推動委員會 [Morakot Post-Disaster Reconstruction Council]‎[15], archived from the original on 04 August 2022:
    Kao said that students at the school first came into contact with samba drums thanks to Tsai, a business owner from the Dream Community in Taipei's Sijhih District.
  • 2017 September 1, Richard Saunders, “Off the Beaten Track: Dajian Mountain: Short but steep”, in Taipei Times[16], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 31 August 2017, Features, page 13[17]:
    As anyone who visited or lived in Taipei back in the early 1990s or before will know, the metropolis (and its surrounding satellites) have undergone an amazing, almost unrecognizable transformation over the last 20 years. However, no part has changed more startlingly than New Taipei City’s Sijhih District (汐止), on the Keelung River about halfway between Taipei City and Keelung. []
    Set in a deep, rocky ravine on the side of the steep ridge above Sijhih, the waterfall makes a fine show as it glides down a steep rock face eroded with countless crinkly serrations that give it a distinctive appearance, but in dry weather it dries up almost completely.
  • 2017 September 30, “The Keelung River Overall Improvement Project (Early Stage) Contents of the Plan”, in The 10th River Management Office, WRA[18], archived from the original on 07 July 2022[19]:
    The project enables the bureau to control the rainfall of Huoshaoliao and 18% area of the basin, avoid levying the extensive private lands around middle and downstream areas in Sijhih, improve the bridges, divert 1310 CMS in peak from upper Keelung River with 200-year-frenquency flood 1620 CMS into the East China Sea, and lower the water level of the downstream Keelung River by 1.5 meters in average (3.13 meters in average in Rueifang segment).
  • 2020, GUO SIANG (吳國翔) WU, “汐止區深開挖之案例研究 [Case Study of an Excavation in Sijhih]”, in National Taiwan University of Science and Technology (國立臺灣科技大學), National Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations in Taiwan (臺灣博碩士論文知識加值系統)"108NTUS5512078"., archived from "108NTUS5512078". the original on 05 March 2023:
    To understand the deep excavation behavior of the bottom-up method, a 13.9 m deep excavation in Sijhih has been chosen for study.
  • (Can we date this quote?), “Contact Us”, in GigaFast Ethernet Ltd.[20], archived from the original on 13 August 2020[21]:
    A truly international manufacturer, GigaFast’s headquarter is located in Sijhih, Taiwan. Our manufacturing is located in Dong Guan, China and our sales and marketing office is located in San Jose, California.
  • 2021 July 27, Kayleigh Madjar, “Taiwanese artist’s work generates buzz in Singapore”, in Taipei Times[22], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 26 July 2021, Taiwan News, page 2:
    “A Sculptor’s Secret Garden” features 16 sculptures inspired by Lee Kuang-yu’s own secret garden in the mountains of New Taipei City’s Sijhih District (汐止). []
    Chini Gallery, which sponsored the show, said that the exhibition has released Lee Kuang-yu’s art from the confines of a gallery, allowing the pieces to work in tandem with their lush surroundings as they do at his Sijhih studio.
  • n.d., “YIHLIN FOUNDRY AND MACHINE CORP.”, in 台灣鑄造品工業同業公會 [Taiwan Casting Industry Association]‎[23], archived from the original on 28 October 2021:
    Located in Sijhih District, New Taipei City, Yihlin Foundry and Machine Corp. was founded in 1977 by Hsu Ching Fu and his partners.
  • 2022 October 18, “The ‘avenger of evil’ in Taiwan The yearly Durga Puja held by the Indian community in Taiwan demonstrates the deepening cultural ties between the two nations”, in National Chung Hsing University[24], archived from the original on 02 March 2023:
    The celebration of Durga Puja in the New Taipei City Library in Sijhih District (汐止) early this month shows once again the deepening cultural and educational ties between Taiwan and India.
  • 2022 November 9, Johnson (拱祥生) Kung, “Improving Shijhih-Keelung traffic”, in Julian Clegg, transl., Taipei Times[25], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2022-11-14, Editorials, page 8:
    The Wudu to Sijhih section of the Sun Yat-sen Freeway is the main traffic route between Keelung and Sijhih, and there is heavy traffic during the morning rush hour.
  • 2023 January 16, Jake Chung, “Donghu-Sijhih MRT line gets green light”, in Taipei Times[26], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 16 January 2023, Taiwan News, page 2:
    The Executive Yuan on Friday approved a six-station Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) line from Taipei’s Donghu (東湖) area to New Taipei City’s Sijhih District (汐止) in an effort to ease traffic congestion on roads heading to Keelung from the greater Taipei area. []
    The new line should lessen traffic in Sijhih District and connect to another planned line in Keelung, which is expected to begin construction later this year, according to the New Taipei City Department of Rapid Transit Systems.
  • 2023 January 19, Robert Preston, “Opening of Taipei’s Ankeng light rail line delayed”, in International Railway Journal[27], →ISSN, archived from the original on 19 January 2023[28]:
    Elsewhere in New Taipei, the Taiwanese government has approved the construction of a metro [KS1] line with six stations from the Sijhih district to the Donghu area of Taipei.
  • 2023 February 16, “Inmate arrested after failing to return from temporary leave”, in Taipei Times[29], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 15 February 2023, Taiwan News, page 2:
    Lu Tsung-lung (魯宗龍) was arrested by the Railway Police Bureau’s criminal investigation unit at about 5pm in an Internet cafe in New Taipei City’s Sijhih District (汐止), the bureau said. []
    After reviewing footage from more than 100 security cameras in Taipei and Hualien, investigators spotted him at the airport, and then buying a train ticket at Taipei’s Nangang Station (南港). He was later seen getting off a train in Sijhih.