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Beijing
Beijing to merge downtown districtsPosted by Joel Martinsen on Friday, July 2, 2010 at 3:32 PM
With the aim of streamlining government operations and facilitating future development, Beijing will eliminate two districts in its old city. The plan to merge Xuanwu District with Xicheng District, and Chongwen District with Dongcheng District has been approved by the State Council and was announced on the front page of the city's newspapers. The new Xicheng and Dongcheng Districts will retain the same sub-district divisions but will eliminate redundant upper-level bureaucracy. The China Daily and Global Times, Beijing-based national English-language papers, both quoted residents who tied the elimination of the two districts to the disappearance of traditional Beijing culture. "I'm really sad that Chong-wen's name will be gone," said Wang He, a 62-year-old Beijinger quoted in the China Daily. But the name Chongwen will not be gone. The districts of Xuanwu and Chongwen took their name from gates in the inner city wall, and although the gate towers were dismantled in the mid-1960s, the names live on as stops on the Beijing subway system. And in fact, the two districts were not even given their current names until the 1950s. Here's how Baidu's user-edited encyclopedia relates the history of Chongwen District:
Baidu users have yet to add a similar history of Xuanwu District. Beijing's administrative divisions were redrawn quite a few times over the past six decades. The Beijing News feature includes a brief timeline of the changes: 1949 1950 1952 1956 1958 Qianmen District is divided between the districts of Chongwen and Xuanwu. Dongjiao District is renamed Chaoyang District. Jingxikuang District is renamed Mentougou District. Shijingshan DIstrict is absorbed by the districts of Fengtai, Haidian, and Mentougou. The districts of Dongdan and Dongsi are combined to form Dongcheng District, and Xidan and Xisi are combined to form Xicheng District. Nanyuan District is divided between the districts of Chaoyang, Fengtai, and Daxing. 1960 1963 1967 1974 1980 1986 1997 1998 1999 2001 Links and Sources
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Comments on Beijing to merge downtown districts
I always think that the districts, like Chaoyang District are huge. But if it streamlines government spending at the upper level it makes sense, somewhere. Although the larger waste in other parts of government spending is ridiculous.
As you have explained there isn't much history to the definitions of the districts anyway so all is not lost (which wasn't there to start with).
Maybe more use would be to redefine the China Post postcodes to help with deliveries and directions. For one huge area to have a postcode of 100026 seems quite bizarre.