Citations:Tiantongyuan
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English citations of Tiantongyuan
2006 2007 2010s 2021 2022 | |||||||
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- 2006 August 25, Xubo Jiang, “Amateur radio enthusiasts search for missing mum”, in Beijing Review[1], number 273, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 2, column 1:
- ‘Ham’ amateur radio operators in Tiantongyuan, a community in northern Beijing, are using the airwaves to search for an elderly mum who has been missing for over a week.
- 2007 January 15, “Roller-skating to marriage”, in China Daily[2], archived from the original on 21 January 2007[3]:
- This past weekend, a trend-setting groom in Beijing's Tiantongyuan community held a unique wedding ceremony for his bride a roller-skating parade.
- 2011, Chunrong Liu, “Contested ground: community and neighbourhood”, in Xiaowei Zang, editor, Understanding Chinese Society[4], Routledge, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 72:
- Another key event was the spontaneous mobilization of the Tiantongyuan neighbourhood in greater Beijing in 2008, which was an effort to modify the route plan of line no.5 of the Beijing subway system so that the neighbourhood could be more conveniently connected.
- 2012, Tom Miller, China's Urban Billion: The story behind the biggest migration in human history[5], Zed Books, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 137:
- Nevertheless, China’s investment in subway systems is overwhelmingly positive. And there are also encouraging signs, too, that Chinese cities are beginning to shape urban development around public transport hubs. For example, Tiantongyuan, a high-density community of giant housing blocks in the suburbs of northern Beijing, has three subway stations.
- 2021 November 2, Caiyu Liu, “A community in Beijing reputed to be the largest residential area in Asia reports four new positive COVID-19 cases”, in Global Times[6], archived from the original on 02 November 2021[7]:
- Beijing reported four new positive COVID-19 cases on Tuesday who are from the same family living in Tiantongyuan, an enormous neighborhood in Beijing's Changping district reputed to be the largest residential area in Asia.
- 2022 July 14, Eduardo Baptista, “Some Beijing travelers asked to wear COVID monitoring bracelets, sparking outcry”, in Tomasz Janowski, editor, Reuters[8], archived from the original on 14 July 2022, China[9]:
- According to posts published on Wednesday evening and Thursday morning on microblogging platform Weibo, some Beijing residents returning to the capital were asked by their neighbourhood committees to wear an electronic bracelet throughout the mandatory home quarantine period. […]
A community worker at Tiantongyuan, Beijing's northern suburb, confirmed to state-backed news outlet Eastday that the measure was in effect in the neighbourhood, though she called the practice "excessive".