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The first digit is for a greater postal zone, each three digit postal code corresponds to a township, county-administered city, or district. In the hierarchy of administrative divisions of Taiwan , districts are under a special municipality or a provincial city ; while townships and county-administered cities are under a county .
Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport at Dayuan District is the largest airport in Taiwan. It serves as the main international hub for China Airlines and EVA Air. Taiwan Taoyuan handled 25,114,418 passengers in 2010. It is the fifteenth-busiest air freight hub in the world and thirteenth-busiest by international passenger traffic.
Zhongli is centered around the Zhongli railway station, the third-busiest railway station in Taiwan. There is also the Neili railway station and the under-construction Chungyuan railway station. The Taoyuan HSR station on the Taiwan High Speed Rail (THSR) is a 15-minute drive from central Zhongli. There are free shuttle buses from central ...
Guishan District and Taoyuan District of Taoyuan City, Taiwan Coordinates 25°00′06.1″N 121°19′49.2″E / 25.001694°N 121.330333°E / 25.001694; 121.
Taoyuan, Taiwan (桃園市), special municipality, formerly known as Taoyuan County (桃園縣) Taoyuan District (桃園區), urban district of Taoyuan City, formerly itself known as Taoyuan City; Taoyuan District, Kaohsiung (桃源區), rural district of Kaohsiung City; Taoyuan International Airport (IATA: TPE), the main international airport ...
Longtan District (Chinese: 龍潭區; pinyin: Lóngtán Qū) is a rural district in southern Taoyuan City, Taiwan. Longtan is home to the headquarters of the Republic of China Army. The township is known for the Buddhist temple in the center of Longtan Lake and the large Bainien community project.
Taoyuan District (Bunun: Ngani; Chinese: 桃源區; pinyin: Táoyuán Qū) is a mountain indigenous district of Kaohsiung City, Taiwan. It is the largest district in Kaohsiung City by area and the least densely populated district in Taiwan. The population is mainly the indigenous Bunun people and Saaroa people.
In 1920 under the Japanese rule, the city was renamed to Pingzhen. On 1 March 1992, it was upgraded from a rural township as the third county-administered city of Taoyuan County named Pingzhen City. On 25 December 2014, it was upgraded to a district named Pingzhen District when Taoyuan County was upgraded from a county to a municipality. [1]