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Yonghe District

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Yonghe
永和區
Yonghe District
Yonghe District in New Taipei City
Yonghe District in New Taipei City
Country Taiwan
RegionNorthern Taiwan
Special municipalityNew Taipei City
Government
 • MayorWu Xingbang (吳興邦)
Area
 • Total
5.7138 km2 (2.2061 sq mi)
Population
 (January 2016)
 • Total
225,353
Time zoneUTC+8 (CST)
Postal code
234
Websitewww.yonghe.ntpc.gov.tw Template:Zh icon

Template:Contains Chinese text

Yonghe District (Chinese: 永和區; pinyin: Yǒnghé Qū; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Éng-hô-khu) is an inner city district in the southern part of New Taipei, Taiwan. Yonghe District is the smallest district in New Taipei City. It is primarily a residential area, and serves as a bedroom community for industry in Taipei and surrounding areas. With around 40,000 inhabitants per square kilometer, Yonghe is the densest district-level subdivision in Taiwan, and one of the densest local government subdivisions in the world.[1]

History

On 1 January 1979, Yonghe was established as county-controlled city of Taipei County. With the changing of Taipei County to the special municipality of New Taipei City on 25 December 2010, Yonghe City was changed to Yonghe District.

Geology

The Xindian River forms a natural boundary between Yonghe and Taipei City to the north and east, although three bridges connect the two areas. To the south and west lies Zhonghe District, which shares some administration and facilities with Yonghe.[2]

Notable products

The city is famous for its soy milk, and breakfast stores advertising "Yonghe Soy Milk" can be found all over Taiwan.[3]

Government agencies

Tourist attractions

Transportation

Dingxi Station

Yonghe is served by the Zhonghe Line of the Taipei Metro, Station of which are located in the city: Dingxi. In addition, Fuhe Bridge passes through Yonghe and has an interchange there, as does the MacAuthur 1st & 2nd bridges .

Three major bridges connect Yonghe with other districts:

Notable natives

See also

References

  1. ^ "Table 1. The Profile of Land 、Population and Budget of All Districts in Taipei county". Department of Budget, Accounting, and Statistics of Taipei County. Retrieved 24 September 2010.
  2. ^ Nature, Yonghe City Government
  3. ^ Adams, Jonathan (4 April 2009), Taipei: A Tour of the City's Best-Known Eats, Wall Street Journal {{citation}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)