The shopping area of Jiefangbei (“Monument of Liberation") in the Yuzhong District includes a wide variety of stores, recreation centers, hotels, and other facilities.
2012 December 24, Matt McCann, “In Western China, Steep Highs and Steep Lows”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2023-04-15, Photography, Video and Visual Journalism[4]:
People young and old enjoy an afternoon on the banks of the Jialing River, facing the central Yuzhong district of Chongqing.
The central peninsula area of Yuzhong District, between the Jialing River to the north and the Yangtze River to the south, is the most interesting and dynamic area of Chongqing.
2015, Yang Jiang et al., “Making Streets Smile to Regenerate Cities: A Case of Chongqing, China”, in Reinventing Planning: Examples from the Profession[6], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 182:
Observing the results from the Route 3 implementation, one Yuzhong District senior government official believed that a similar project should be done to revitalize the heart of the central business district area, called Jiefangbei.
2008, Simon Foster, “The Three Gorges”, in Adventure Guide: China (Hunter Travel Guides)[7], Hunter Publishing, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 263:
The city’s meteoric growth has left it with several million residents in the Yuzhong peninsula alone, and over 30 million in the municipal area! This gargantuan population and the city’s strategic importance led to Chongqing’s separation from its parent province, Szechuan, in 1997, and it was designated as a “specially administered municipality,” controlled directly by the central government.
Once you’ve been to Chongqing, it is hard to think of the city and not at the same time picture the beautiful mountains, and the majestic Yangtze River circumfloating the densely built Yuzhong Peninsula, only to absorb the waters of Jialing River just moments later.
2015, Yang Jiang et al., “Making Streets Smile to Regenerate Cities: A Case of Chongqing, China”, in Reinventing Planning: Examples from the Profession[9], →ISBN, →OCLC, page 176:
The Yuzhong Peninsula, with a population of about 700,000 residents, has served as the business and historic center of the city (see Figure 1). Due to its mountainous landscape, walking has long been a necessary and popular mode of transportation within the center city.
[1949 September 21, “Grave Accusation”, in Pathfinder, volume 56, number 19, Chicago: Farm Journal, Inc., page 25, column 1:
Seven centuries ago the armies of the Mongol Emperor Genghis Khan conquered China and swept West as far as Bulgaria. Today millions in the northwest border provinces of China still worship the memory of the great warrior. Last week Chinese Communists enlisted his aid in their campaign to conquer Northwest China. To stir up feeling against Chiang Kai-shek, they put out a story that Nationalists had rifled the tomb of the great Khan at Yuchung Kansu, and removed his coffin to prevent its capture by the Communists.]
In the Shanzhuang district of Yuzhong County in Gansu, the annual average per capita grain intake was only 20-50 kilograms, and of the 49 production teams in the whole district, 48 had an average per capita income of less than 40 yuan.
2004, Christopher P. Atwood, “Eight White Yurts”, in Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire[11], Facts on File, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 164, column 2:
In May 1939 China’s Nationalist government, worried about the use Japan might make of the remains, ordered the most holy objects — the caskets of Chinggis, and Borte and of Qulan and the black four-footed standard — transported to a Taoist temple in Yuzhong county, Gansu.
2011 April 8, Chris Buckley, Sui-Lee Wee, “Fear and swagger drive China's clampdown on dissent”, in John Chalmers, editor, Reuters[12], archived from the original on 02 July 2022, World News:
A directive from Yuzhong County in the northwestern province of Gansu declared, for example: “Since the abrupt changes in Tunisia and Egypt, Western forces hostile to China have been itching to do something and do their utmost to stir up a fuss.”
2016 May 19, Didi Kirsten Tatlow, “Accusations of Brutality Cast Harsh Light on Chinese Police”, in The New York Times[13], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2016-05-22, Asia Pacific:
The official Weibo account of the Yuzhong Public Security Bureau in Lanzhou said that two police officers at the local Peace Police Station had “stopped working” and that the events were being investigated by the police and by other branches of government.