Shanshan Town (simplified Chinese: 杉山镇; traditional Chinese: 杉山鎮; pinyin: Shānshān Zhèn) is a rural town in Louxing District of Loudi City, Hunan Province, People's Republic of China. As of the 2015 census it had a population of 43,200 and an area of 66.38-square-kilometre (25.63 sq mi).[1]
Shanshan Town
杉山镇 | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 27°49′13″N 112°00′59″E / 27.82028°N 112.01639°E | |
Country | People's Republic of China |
Province | Hunan |
Prefecture-level city | Loudi |
District | Louxing District |
Area | |
• Total | 66.38 km2 (25.63 sq mi) |
Population (2015) | 43,200 |
Time zone | UTC+8 (China Standard) |
Postal code | 417004 |
Area code | 0738 |
History
editIn 2015, Xiaobi Township was merged into Shanshan Town.
Administrative division
editThe town is divided into 18 villages and 1 community, the following areas:
- Enkou Community (恩口社区)
- Shanshan Village (杉山村)
- Huaxi Village (花溪村)
- Tangping Village (塘坪村)
- Tianwan Village (田湾村)
- Jiyun Village (集云村)
- Yaozi Village (鹞子村)
- Lisong Village (栗松村)
- Wanle Village (万乐村)
- Mushan Village (木山村)
- Siji Village (四季村)
- Quanfu Village (泉福村)
- Tianping Village (田坪村)
- Batang Village (坝塘村)
- Ranpu Village (染铺村)
- Leshan Village (乐善村)
- Shidi Village (石底村)
- Shilong Village (石龙村)
- Shiyuan Village (石垣村)
Geography
editThe town shares a border with Shijing Town to the west, Fanjiang Town to the east, Hutian Town of Xiangxiang to the northeast, Shuangjiang Township to the northwest, and Lianbin Subdistrict to the south.[2]
Transportation
editProvincial Highway
editProvincial Highway S209 is a north–south highway in the town.[2]
Expressway
editChangsha-Shaoshan-Loudi Expressway passes across the township east to west.[2]
Railway
editThe Luoyang–Zhanjiang Railway, from Luoyang City, Henan Province to Zhanjiang City, Guangdong Province, through the town.[2]
References
edit- ^ 娄星区乡镇区划调整方案:调整后下辖1乡3镇7街道. rednet.cn (in Chinese). 2015-12-04.
- ^ a b c d Zhang Hong, ed. (2018). "Louxing District and Shuangfeng County" 《娄星区和双峰县》. 《中国分省系列地图册:湖南》 [Maps of Provinces in China: Hunan] (in Chinese). Xicheng District, Beijing: SinoMaps Press. pp. 170–171. ISBN 978-7-5031-8949-4.