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Examples

  • My Institute for the Future colleague Marina Gorbis snapped a photo of this vintage Chinese copy of a BMW R-71 motorcycle, and accompanying plaque, on display at the Ramada Inn in Pudong, China.

    Boing Boing 2007

  • The largest screen, nearly two miles away, is the entire side of the thirty-seven-story Aurora building in Pudong, Shanghai’s new financial district.

    Postcards From Tomorrow Square 2006

  • The largest screen, nearly two miles away, is the entire side of the thirty-seven-story Aurora building in Pudong, Shanghai’s new financial district.

    Postcards From Tomorrow Square 2006

  • The largest screen, nearly two miles away, is the entire side of the thirty-seven-story Aurora building in Pudong, Shanghai’s new financial district.

    Postcards From Tomorrow Square 2006

  • The largest screen, nearly two miles away, is the entire side of the thirty-seven-story Aurora building in Pudong, Shanghai’s new financial district.

    Postcards From Tomorrow Square 2006

  • Today, Mr. Ramo, vice chairman at Kissinger Associates Inc., calls Pudong the capital of Chinese "exceptionalism" and attributes its rise to the central government's use of the massive economic tools at its disposal.

    Shanghai's Pudong, Once Soulless, Rises Up James T. Areddy 2011

  • This is certainly debatable for large cities such as Beijing and Shanghai which carries a lot of weight in the nation -- unless, of course, if the government used unweighted means so that the weight of a hut in the village is the same as that luxury villa in Pudong, which is not quite the right way to calculate

    China amid the global economic turmoil Sun Bin 2008

  • It bulldozed the villages and in a hot-brained hurry effectively threw up a brand-new city, called Pudong (“East of the Pu”).

    The Rise of Big Water Mann, Charles C. 2007

  • Today, Mr. Ramo, vice chairman at Kissinger Associates Inc., calls Pudong the capital of Chinese "exceptionalism" and attributes its rise to the central government's use of the massive economic tools at its disposal.

    WSJ.com: What's News US 2011

  • Today, Mr. Ramo, vice chairman at Kissinger Associates Inc., calls Pudong the capital of Chinese "exceptionalism" and attributes its rise to the central government's use of the massive economic tools at its disposal.

    WSJ.com: What's News US 2011

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