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Russian & US presidents Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush at the 2001 APEC meeting Shanghainese students at the SSTM during Barack Obama's visit. Century Square was built in 1995, and the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum was planned for its western side as a key project for popularizing science in the Yangtze Delta region. [5]
Shanghai Science and Technology Museum: Shanghai: China 2001 Sichuan Science and Technology Museum: Qingyang: China 2006 Shrikrishna Science Centre: Patna: India 1978 The Mind Museum: Taguig (Metro Manila) Philippines 2012 Taipower Exhibit Center in Southern Taiwan: Hengchun: Taiwan 2005 Salem Science Park Salem: India: 2022
Israel National Museum of Science, Technology, and Space in Haifa, Israel; National Science and Technology Museum in Kaohsiung, Taiwan; China Science and Technology Museum in Beijing, China; Shanghai Science and Technology Museum in Shanghai, China; Sichuan Science and Technology Museum in Sichuan, China
Shanghai Astronomy Museum is a planetarium opened in 2021 in Lingang New City, Pudong New Area district, Shanghai. Its dome covers 38,000 square meters. It is the world's largest planetarium in terms of building scale. [1] The planetarium, designed by New York City based Ennead Architects, serves as an educational and entertainment site for ...
Phys.org is an online science, research and technology news aggregator which re-publishes press releases and stories from news agencies (a business model known as churnalism). [1] [2] [3] As of 2014, Phys.org was posting an average of 98 items per day. [4] It is part of the Science X network of websites, headquartered on the Isle of Man.
Converting the building cost $64 million which was paid for by the Shanghai government. [6] [1] The museum is on the site of the Expo 2010 and on the left bank of the Huangpu River. It opened in 2012 with an exhibition of contemporary art from Centre Pompidou, Paris's best-known contemporary art museum, entitled Electric Fields, Surrealism and ...
Tianzifang or Tianzi Fang (Chinese: 田子坊; pinyin: Tiánzǐ Fāng; Shanghainese: Die Tz Fån) is a touristic arts and crafts enclave that has developed from a renovated traditional residential area in the French Concession area of Shanghai. [1]
Gould resumed publication from Chongqing on October 31, 1943, and resumed in Shanghai in August 1945 after the Japanese surrender. [8] The OSS had spent $350,000 ($6.1 million in today's currency) on the editions by July 1944, 18 months after the start of the New York edition.