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The Ulaanbaatar City Museum offers a view of Ulaanbaatar's history through old maps and photos. Among the permanent items is a huge painting of the capital as it looked in 1912, showing major landmarks such as Gandan Monastery and the Green Palace. Part of the museum is dedicated to special photo exhibits that change frequently.
Map of the districts of Ulaanbaatar. Ulaanbaatar is divided into nine düüregs (Mongolian: Дүүрэг) or municipal districts: Baganuur, Bagakhangai, Bayangol, Bayanzürkh, Chingeltei, Khan Uul, Nalaikh, Songino Khairkhan and Sükhbaatar. Each district is subdivided into khoroos, of which there are 204. [1]
Clickable map of Mongolian provinces. Provinces (Aimags) [4] Year established Area ... Ulaanbaatar (provincial municipality) 1942 4,704.40 1,539,810 327 Ulaanbaatar:
The airport was referred to by various names during its planning and construction phases, including New Ulaanbaatar International Airport [31] [b] and Khöshig (or Khöshigt) Valley Airport. [ c ] The new airport was given its current name on 2 July 2020, with the former Chinggis Khaan International Airport reverting to its pre-2005 name of ...
The higher level administrative unit is the aimag, except for Ulaanbaatar which administers its own federal district (Nalaikh and Baganuur are administered by Ulaanbaatar). The numbers of inhabitants relate to the cities proper without surrounding districts.
Sükhbaatar District (Mongolian: Sükhbaatar düüreg) is one of nine districts of the Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar. It is subdivided into 18 subdistricts. The district was established in 1965 and named after revolutionary hero Damdin Sükhbaatar. As of 2004, it had an approximate population of 112,533 in 24,568 households.
Ulaanbaatar: International (capital) ZMCK UBN 3600 m x 45 m, concrete: Buyant-Ukhaa International Airport (formerly Chingis Khaan International Airport) Ulaanbaatar: International (capital) ZMUB ULN 14/32: 3100m x 60m, asphalt 15/33: 2000m x 40m, grass
The country of Mongolia is divided into 21 provinces (Mongolian: аймаг, aimag) and the capital (нийслэл, niislel) Ulaanbaatar. [1] [2] Secondary subdivisions outside Ulaanbaatar are called "sum" (сум, often transcribed as soum). In 2006, Mongolia had 331 sums. [3] Sums are further subdivided into bags (баг). While sums always ...