LOS ANGELES, Jan.迷利倉 21, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Crystal Cruises announces the newest perk to its All Inclusive luxury cruise experience: Free Wi-Fi for Crystal Society members, the line's "club" of repeat guests, beginning Fall 2014. Effective with Crystal Serenity's September 19 New England/Canada sailing and Crystal Symphony's October 15 Panama Canal cruise, each Crystal Society guest will receive 60 minutes of complimentary internet access for every day of the cruise. For example, a 10-day cruise will offer 600 free minutes per person (or 1,200 free minutes per couple), a 12-day cruise offers 720 free minutes per person (or 1,440 free minutes per couple), a 14-day cruise offer 840 free minutes (or 1,680 free minutes per couple), etc., which can be used any time throughout the voyage.(Photo: photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140121/LA49891)Society members can use the new complimentary access time wirelessly via iPad, iPhone, laptop or other wireless device or on Crystal's own Computer University@Sea 27" dual-compatible iMac computers. A multi-million dollar Wi-Fi upgrade rolled out in recent months helps guests enjoy maximum onboard connectivity."We are continually refining our all-inclusive experience to offer an array of choices for our global guests. Since the majority of our guests are repeaters, we opted to expand our Crystal Society offerings to thank our loyal patrons," said Edie Bornstein, Crystal's president. "Whether they are on board for a second 10-day getaway or on their 20(th) time for an expansive 108-day World Cruise, travelers today appreciate staying plugged in. By adding this coveted perk to our All Inclusive experience, repeat cruisers in all stateroom and suite categories have one more reason to choose Crystal as their home base while traveling the world in the finest of luxury and ease."The company has spent more than a year planning and installing improvements to the onboard internet experience, including:-- Maximizing satellite ba迷你倉dwidth with the latest technology, allowing for more users and more content to stream simultaneously. -- Expansion of Wi-Fi signal range throughout the ships, making wireless connection available everywhere on board, including all staterooms, public spaces, and outdoor decks. -- The ability to access internet in areas that were previously unavailable, such as Japan.All full revenue guests who have completed their first Crystal cruise automatically become Crystal Society members, and, thusly, can take advantage of this perk on all subsequent Crystal voyages. Guests wishing to purchase additional minutes for $.75 per minute can do so without an activation fee. Internet packages that reduce the per minute charge are also available.Crystal Cruises is the world's leading luxury cruise provider, having earned more "World's Best" awards than any other cruise line, hotel, or resort in history. Providing worldwide vacations of five to 100+ days, itineraries through early 2016 sail to the Mediterranean, Western Europe, British Isles, Scandinavia/Baltic & Russia, North Cape & Arctic Circle, Africa, Asia, Australia/New Zealand, South Pacific, South America, Antarctica, New England/Canada, Panama Canal, Caribbean, and a sumptuous annual World Cruise. Until February 28, all-inclusive, value-priced "Book Now" fares up start at just $1,215/person.Crystal's passion for taking care of guests in an inviting environment of extraordinary space, quality and choices has earned the company more "World's Best" awards than any other cruise line, resort, or hotel in history.For more information and Crystal reservations, contact a travel agent, call 888-799-4625, or visit .crystalcruises.com.CONTACT: Mimi Weisband or Susan Wichmann, 310-203-4305, mediarelations@crystalcruises.comVISIT: Crystal's Media CenterPhoto: photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140121/LA49891PRN Photo Desk, photodesk@prnewswire.comCrystal CruisesWeb site: .crystalcruises.com/自存倉
- 1月 22 週三 201409:18
Crystal Cruises Adds Free Wi-Fi
- 1月 22 週三 201409:10
迪士尼賀歲電影改編手游
迷你倉 epaper.ynet.com/html/2014-01/22/content_37113.htm?div=-1...本報訊(記者 吳琳琳)360公司昨天聯合迪士尼公司宣佈,迪士尼年度票房力作——3D動畫電影《冰雪情緣》改編而成的遊戲《冰雪奇緣》正...儲存倉
- 1月 22 週三 201409:03
廣州版
南方日報訊 (記者/胡良光 通訊員/交通宣 郭小輝 陳文兒 許偉渠 李慧華)今年由於學生流與探親、旅遊客流重疊,春運客流高峰來得早,春運初期旅客發送量較往年有較大幅度增長。昨日廣州市春運辦表示,春運頭5天,廣州地區累計發送旅客379.迷你倉90萬人次,同比上升12.99%。由於部分地區有“過小年”的習俗,預計今明兩天,中運客運公司屬下各客運站將迎來客流小高峰,目前已增加售票窗口、加密班次。廣州市春運辦通報,春運開始頭5天(1月16日—20日),廣州地區累計發送旅客379.90萬人次,同比上升12.99%。其中,鐵路累計發送旅客169.40萬人次,同比增長5.93%;公路累計發送旅客166.65萬人次,同比上升19.71%;水路累計發送旅客0.72萬人次,同比上升14.86%;民航累計發送自存倉客43.12萬人次,同比上升18.23%,秩序良好。由於部分地區有“過小年”的習俗,廣州中運客運公司預計1月22日至23日,該公司屬下各客運站將迎來客流小高峰。為應對將至的客流高峰,各客運站紛紛採取相應措施:芳村客運站增開至12個售票窗口;滘口汽車站從1月22日起在站內新增廣西班線售票專區;海珠客運站發往江西方向的班線每天增加至70班次;夏茅汽車站設立湖南地區班線候乘專區。同時,各客運站免費為旅客提供咨詢、導乘及開水供應等便民服務,最大限度滿足旅客需求。按往常經驗,“過小年”的前一兩天,小汽車、大客車、大貨車等密集出行,極易引發道路堵塞。為此,客運站提醒旅客儘量錯峰出行。與火車票一票難求的“尷尬”不同的是,中運客運公司屬下各客運站的廣西、江西、海南、湖南、湖北等省際班線票源則相對充足。迷你倉出租
- 1月 22 週三 201408:55
中興聯手電信打出“八核組合拳”
迷你倉 cqcbepaper.cqnews.net/cqcb/html/2014-01/22/content_1713626.htm...中興聯手電信 打出“八核組合拳” 重慶晨報訊 新年伊始,手機“八核”大戰號角吹響。1月20日,中興通訊在北京發佈了兩款重量級的“八...文件倉
- 1月 22 週三 201408:45
燈飾璀璨迎馬年
self storage【本報消息】農曆新年將至,為增添市面熱鬧氣氛,民署在澳門、�仔和路環市區共七十九個地點佈置璀璨應節燈飾,行政法務司司長陳麗敏昨與嘉賓於議事亭前地主持亮燈儀式,並提早向居民及遊客拜年。亮燈儀式昨晚六時半舉行。陳麗敏代表特區政府祝願全澳居民心想事成,馬到功成,馬年事事順利。陳麗敏,民署管委會代主席黃有力、諮委會主席梁官漢,郵政局長劉惠明,旅遊局長文綺華,仁慈堂值理會主席飛安達,民署管委會副主席羅永德主禮。行政法務司司長辦公室顧問鄭蘊琪,郵政局副局長趙鎮昌,旅遊迷你倉副局長白文浩、謝慶茜,以及民署管委會、諮委會及監委會成員等出席。黃有力致詞稱,為迎接馬年到來,民署今年以“駿馬歡度賀新禧”為題,於全澳各區佈置富有農曆新年氣氛的賀歲燈飾。賀歲燈飾主要分佈於議事亭前地、圓形地、廣場、公園、街道、休憩區等。當中大型燈飾廿三座、小燈飾約九百五十個、LED彩虹管燈牌約二百九十個,LED米仔碎燈約二萬一千米及馬生肖座地燈飾約一百五十個,亮燈期至三月二日。儀式後,長虹音樂會帶來多首喜慶樂曲,吸引大批居民及遊客駐足欣賞,並在燈飾前拍照留念。迷你倉將軍澳
- 1月 22 週三 201408:39
Visit to Cuba turns into a long trip back in time
Source: Pittsburgh Post-GazetteJan.迷你倉 21--HAVANA -- Colorful, crumbling and controversial, Cuba is caught between then and now, between communism and capitalism and the challenge of two currencies.Thanks to a loosening of travel restrictions for Cuban-Americans by President Barack Obama, Cubans are beginning to get a taste of the benefits of free enterprise. All manner of merchandise has begun showing up in the country, including massive flat-screen TVs, bikes, clothes and microwaves.It was the proverbial dark and stormy night when our charter plane finally touched down after an eight-hour delay in Miami. Once we were through customs, the glass doors slid open to reveal a crowd of people three deep waiting to greet family members pushing carts piled high with goods."This welcome is all for you," joked in-country guide Vivian Quintero Triana. She assisted Joe Scarpaci of the Center for the Study of Cuban Culture + Economy as he led the group from the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh.If you think cigars, rum and classic cars when you envision Cuba, you won't be disappointed. Even in the dark, cars from the 1950s and '60s were obvious in the parking lot just beyond the greeters.There are so many still running that it's like a vintage car show all the time. Weaving among them on the city roads are Soviet-era models, bicycle taxis and, in Old Havana, horses and buggies. Murals and billboards celebrating the 55-year-old revolution and its heroes add a surreal quality to the country, especially in combination with the old vehicles. It's like a movie is being filmed and you are an extra.The impact of the U.S. trade embargo initiated in 1960 and the loss of Soviet support in the late 1980s have taken their toll. Buildings that would be declared uninhabitable in the United States are bursting at their disintegrating seams with inhabitants."The two biggest issues facing Cubans are food and housing," said Mr. Scarpaci.President Raul Castro, brother of Fidel, has introduced some reforms and the people are slowly shaking off the shackles of a 100 percent state-run economy. With state-issued permits, residents are allowed to operate businesses from their homes and buy and sell their own houses. You often see people holding homemade signs advertising for buyers or sellers.Another reform is the permission to buy a car. A new Chinese-made car can cost up to $240,000, a ridiculous amount in any country. In Cuba, it would take the average person more then 1,000 years to pay it off, according to Mr. Scarpaci's calculations. Those with beautifully restored relics offer rides around Havana and along the Malecon, the famous road and seawall built by the United States before the revolution.Cubans are paid in pesos by the state, but visitors use CUCs [Cuban convertible pesos], a different currency that trades one to one with the U.S. dollar. Most people hire the cars for an hour, but they can be had for 30 minutes for about 15 CUCs. The bicycle taxis that remind one of rickshaws are just a few CUCs. Cubans are generally very friendly and happily interact with visitors. Many speak English, so if you don't speak Spanish it won't be a problem.What you need to know is American credit cards and dollars are not accepted. Most people bring cash and change it at the hotel. You end up with about 87 CUCs for $100.As for buying art, the big-ticket items are often paid for by wiring the money once you get home. You take the art with you. It is an honor system. Americans are allowed to bring home jewelry, art and music but nothing state made, which means no cigars or rum. Bring at least $500 if you enjoy bringing home mementos and change it as needed because CUCs are worthless outside of Cuba.The only way for Americans to travel to Cuba legally is with a licensed group. The license is issued by the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control. The Carnegie went on a People to People permit in partnership with the Center for the Study of Cuban Cu迷你倉將軍澳ture + Economy, which is based in Virginia. There are performance and religious licenses that grant Americans access to Cuba as well. Beyonce and Jay-Z caused a stir when they celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary by traveling to Cuba. The famous duo used a People to People license and stayed at the Saratoga Hotel, the same as the Carnegie group.Built in the 1930s, it boasts a mezzanine bar, complete with palm trees, that captures all the romance of old Havana. The rooftop bar and pool were just mint on the mojito.Across the Paseo del Prado from the Saratoga is a building that is a replica of the U.S. Capitol. It was the seat of government before the revolution, but after, it was considered a symbol of corruption and abandoned for a time. Just behind it sits one of 40 tobacco factories that once operated during Havana's heyday.Havana is sometimes called the City of Columns because of all the colonial colonnades. Because part of the city is a UNESCO World Heritage site, the facades must be preserved.Ernest Hemingway is the rare celebrated American. The Floridita, self-proclaimed cradle of the daiquiri, has a bronze statue of Papa in the corner, leaning on the bar. It's a photo op most visitors can't pass up. Live music, smoke and crowds make it a place to pop in, get the picture and move on.The Floridita sits at the beginning of Obispo, a narrow street that leads to the harbor and is filled with tourists and Cubans. While wandering through the souvenir and T-shirt shops where images of the revolutionary Che Guevara hang next to Cuban license plates, comrade caps, bongos and beads, it's easy to forget this is not a free-market society. Musicians, shop owners and peanut sellers vie for your attention just as in any tourist destination.Along the way you pass the Hotel Florida, built in 1885; the 19th-century Johnson & Johnson pharmacy building, which is now a museum; and the Hotel Ambos Mundos, where Hemingway wrote "The Old Man and the Sea." Another area visitors can't miss is the Plaza de Armas and the nearby Plaza de Cathedral. For fans of 1950s architecture, a stop at the Hotel Rivera, famous for being a Mafia hangout, is a must.Most mansions from the glory days of the sugar plantations are still standing. Some are occupied by employees of the owners who fled after the revolution. Others house government officials, and a few are kept up with funds from the families who once lived there.Americans must follow the program outlined by the permit they are traveling under. Visits to the homes of Cubans -- some living very well and others scraping by -- are included in the program as well as dinners in paladares, which are privately run in-home restaurants. While we were dining at L'Atelier, a wonderful paladar in an old Vedado mansion decorated with the work of contemporary Cuban artists, the lights went out. The staff didn't miss a beat, quickly lighting the room with candelabras.Power outages are common in Cuba. So are exceptional artists such as Jose Fuster, a mosaic artist who didn't stop with his home and tiled his neighborhood with colorful, whimsical designs. Then there was sculptor Yoan Capote, who talked to the Carnegie travelers about the meaning behind his work, much of which deals with communication and his country's relationship with the United States.Cuba's African side influences its music, art, dance and religion, including Santeria, a blend of Catholicism and African spiritual practices. Havana is an enchanting meld of cultures, architecture, people and places, and although the sun will inevitably set on the Castros' Cuba, what will replace it remains to be seen.For more Carnegie Museum trip offerings: 412-622-5772 or .carnegiemuseums.org.Patricia Sheridan: psheridan@post-gazette.com, 412-263-2613 or follow her on Twitter at .twitter.com/pasheridan.Copyright: ___ (c)2014 the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Visit the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette at .post-gazette.com Distributed by MCT Information Services倉
- 1月 22 週三 201408:32
EDITORIAL: Voter ID nixed: The sheer weight of evidence buries a bad law
Source: Pittsburgh Post-GazetteJan.mini storage 21--If ever a court opinion clarified a public issue, it was the one handed down by Commonwealth Court Judge Bernard McGinley last week on the law requiring Pennsylvanians to show photo ID at the polls when they vote. What seemed to many to be an unconstitutional affront to a basic right was confirmed as such by the judge.As welcome as this ruling was, the manner in which it was decided was especially persuasive. This was a ruling with the weight to end a long and contentious argument.Previously, defenders of the law were free to argue that the voter ID requirement was common sense -- that to do anything in today's world people must show ID and therefore it must be easy.That smug assumption about people less well off -- minorities, the poor, the elderly -- evaporated under the hot light of the evidence. Judge McGinley found that the voters disenfranchised by the requirement were not a trifling figure; they numbered in the "hundreds of thousands."It's little wonder. While creditiself storageg the government with good faith, Judge McGinley nevertheless painted a damning picture of its bureaucratic efforts to implement the law. Those who needed ID had to travel to one of just 71 centers in order to get it (five were in Philadelphia). Nine counties had no center at all; another nine were open just one day of the week. Half of Pennsylvania was left without ID centers operating five days of week.If you were poor or old and didn't have public transportation in a rural county, good luck getting ID. Even if people jumped through all the hoops erected to limit access to the polls, it was in the service of a faulty idea -- as the court noted, in-person voter fraud is exceedingly rare and the commonwealth could cite no evidence for it.The Corbett administration should quit while it is behind and the people are ahead. This law has been buried by the evidence.Copyright: ___ (c)2014 the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Visit the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette at .post-gazette.com Distributed by MCT Information Services迷你倉
- 1月 21 週二 201410:09
Taking innovation to the next level
By Hal Gregersen and Curtis T.迷你倉 Lefrandt Although China has shown remarkable determination and skill in organizing and deploying resources to meet key objectives, there are still significant barriers that continue to limit its people’s creative capacity. Critics of China’s patent process point out that below-par standards, poorly designed incentives and a focus on quantity over quality have created a system in which “patents are easy to file, but gems are hard to find”. Some of China’s brightest minds, such as ex-Google China chief Lee Kai-Fu, note that China’s educational system trains its students to be very good at rote learning but “doesn’t make them creative, original thinkers”. Others point out that Internet censorship and a lack of cultural diversity creates an overwhelmingly homogeneous environment that isn’t conducive to creative thinking. To fuel the next wave of innovation, China needs to combine these impressive investments with behavior and a cultural mind-set that foster truly disruptive innovation. No doubt this is easier said than done, but several bright spots of innovation direct us to deep wells of creative potential that can be tapped within Chinese people and companies. For example, five Chinese companies landed spots on our “World’s Most Innovative Companies List”, a joint collaboration with Forbes Magazine and HOLT (a division of Credit Suisse Group AG) that we have run for the past three years. Companies on our list are ranked by their innovation premium: the difference between their market capitalization and a net present value of cash flows from existing businesses. The five most innovative Chinese companies include meatpacker and pork producer Henan Shuanghui Group (ranked ninth on our list), Internet behemoths Baidu Inc (10th) and Tencent Holdings Ltd (17th), Kweichow Moutai Co Ltd (44th), and at 64th place, China Oilfield Services, a majority-owned subsidiary of Chinese State-owned company China National Offshore Oil Corp Group. What sets these companies apart as top innovators is they cultivate certain key behavior and cultural philosophies. As a part of our research on creativity and innovation, we studied dozens of similar companies to draw insights into how businesses and individuals can successfully innovate — despite the unique challenges they face. What we found is that disruptive innovators frequently practice five fundamental “discovery skills” that distinguish innovators fro儲存倉 non-innovators. Innovators ask uncomfortable questions that challenge the status quo. They observe the world like anthropologists to uncover novel approaches to doing things. They network with people who don’t think like them to access drastically different perspectives other than their own. They experiment relentlessly to pilot new ideas and often live outside their comfort zone. Collectively, these behaviors trigger new associations, which help them connect seemingly disparate ideas into highly disruptive and valuable innovations. Take Henan Shuanghui, the third most innovative company in Asia according to our rankings, and China’s largest producer of pork and other meat. The company made a splash globally last May when it picked up ham king Smithfield Foods Inc from the US for $4.7 billion. Shuanghui has shown that it has a strong culture of observing, networking and experimenting. For example, studying the Oscar Mayer marketing playbook and networking with top-notch Western marketing companies gave the company the idea to invest $1.6 million in co-producing Shuanghui Forest, a 200-episode TV cartoon series featuring 10 characters modeled after its signature hot dogs. Through robust experimentation, Shuanghui has also developed a cutting-edge quality control system that tracks the condition of 15 million hogs in factories across China. Leveraging these key discovery skills, Henan Shuanghui has maintained a long-term growth-rate of 97 percent and generated more than $ 6 billion in just the last 12 months. Chinese policy makers, economic leaders and legislators can foster similar success stories in other companies by enabling the development and celebration of these critical skills in educational and professional settings. An even more innovative China has much to offer its people and the world. Leaders and bold new moves by companies such as Henan Shuanghui offer a glimpse into what the next three decades of prosperity could look like if China marries its massive investment in patents, processes and research and development with the proven skills and philosophies of successful innovators. Hal Gregersen is the Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank Chaired professor of innovation and leadership at INSEAD. Curtis Lefrandt is principal and vice-president of product and training at The Innovator’s DNA. 97percentHenan Shuanghui Group’s long-term growth rate 6billion dollarsgenerated by the meatpacker in the past 12 months 迷你倉最平
- 1月 21 週二 201409:59
花在彰化 造訪費茲洛公園 大年初一喜氣登場 縣長卓伯源20日率花YOUNG少女與騎警隊暖場 歡迎全國民眾春節來遊玩
彰化縣春節重頭戲─花在彰化系列活動大年初一就要喜氣登場,主展場在涵蓋原溪州公園、苗木生產專區及森林區廣達123公頃的「費茲洛公園」,縣長卓伯源20日率花YOUNG少女與騎警隊暖場,歡迎全國遊客造訪這最美麗的後花園。花在彰化活動深受好評,今年活動最大亮點則溪州公園與苗木園區之間新闢完成的「費茲洛公園」。卓伯源說,它是以全球移居城市第1名澳洲墨爾本的費茲洛公園為藍圖,利用彰化特有的花卉與苗木資源,規畫打造而成的台灣新景點。溪州費茲洛公園是將長約1.儲存5公里的102鄉道闢建成16公尺寬的景觀道路,沿迷你倉有37公頃的平地造林區及植栽、草地步道景觀等設計,一年四季更有不同花期,民眾賞花,還能在全台最大廣達70公頃的平地造林中享受森林浴。123公頃的溪州費茲洛公園,是台北大安森林公園的4.7倍,園區內設置有白色歐式花架結合攀藤植物等景觀意象,是一處完美完善的活動休憩場所。花在彰化系列活動,溪州公園區有馬年大型花卉佈置、花藝設計、蘭花景觀布置及大型舞台表演活動等,入園時間為每天上午9時至下午5時30分。苗木專區景觀台有繽紛花毯,可將周邊美景盡收眼底。另有藝術花卉馬車遊行及帥氣騎警隊於3大展區巡禮繞行。self storage
- 1月 21 週二 201409:49
太原 打造北京「副中心」建一流省會城市
今年,太原將繼續按照中央城鎮化工作會議精神和山西省「一核一圈三群」的戰略部署,抓住太原城市群上昇為國家戰略的機遇,堅持新城引領下的「五城聯動」(包括突出新城、重構老城、挖掘古城、建設山城、保護縣城),加快擴容提質步伐,努力建設山、水、城、林、人和諧共融,歷史感、生態性、文化味相容並蓄的現代化一流省會城市。香港商報記者郎宏偉、陳琳 「把脈」太原建北京「副中心」正在召開的山西「兩會」上,山西省委書記袁純清在太原代表團全團會議上再次強調,太原要主動融入到環渤海地區,努力建成北京「副中心」。 如何將太原打造成北京「副中心」、環渤海宜居城市?山西省委常委、太原市委書記陳川平認為,樹立底線思維,迎難而上,把環境布局好了,城市魅力提升了,自然會吸引高科技等企業落戶,吸引更多人來安家。 記者將「太原打造北京副中心」的消息拋給正在參加「兩會」的山西港澳政協委員張宏業時,他直搖頭說:「怎麼可能?」對於太原城市變化,他曾通過本報有所了解,當和記者驅車參觀中環路後,他不僅感歎「當年開工、當年通車」的壯舉,而且感覺「工程質量蠻好」,並一改己見,覺得「太原成為北京副中心」完全有可能。他認為,中環、外環把太原整個城市框架拉大,完全具備一座國際城市發展的條件,只要軟硬環境能跟得上,五年應該會有一個質的變化。 圍繞打造北京「副中心」,太原市主動向京津地區全面對接,加強好項目、大項目的承接和跟蹤服務,通過強化與清華、北大等大專院校、科研單位產學研深度整合,培植創新創業的環境和熱土,建成了創新孵化、科創招商、開發融資、產業促進的30萬平方米清華科技園,預計今年將有70家科創企業入駐園區。 改善環境建環渤海宜居城市 環境反映著一個城市的綜合實力。近幾年太原市連續開展省城環境質量綜合整治,空氣越來越好。陳川平說,之前住在太鋼,早上起來地上一層黑,現在沒了。他調侃說那個時侯太原根本就不是PM2.迷你倉出租5,可能10.5都不止。不久前,北京中關村的客人到太原考察,一下車深深地呼吸了一口新鮮空氣,稱太原的空氣比北京好多了。「這在之前簡直不敢想象,其實讓市民呼吸上新鮮的空氣也是太原最大的民生工程!」陳川平強調。 據了解,去年太原除關停污企外,還拆了600台燃煤鍋爐,剩下的1100台將在兩年內全部拆完。與此同時,今年還將推進集中供熱全覆蓋工程,開建太古遠距離、大溫差供熱工程,完成嘉節燃氣電廠、二電廠、太鋼集中供熱擴源擴網不低於3000萬平方米;加快建設垃圾電廠、秸稈電廠,杜絕垃圾、秸稈焚燒;全部淘汰黃標車,嚴控機動車尾氣污染;將繼續實施「生態新政」,加大東西山生態綠化投入力度,建立大規模、高質量、美景觀的生態綠色屏障;開工建設8平方公里的晉陽湖公園、2平方公里的植物園,完善提升中環近50公里的綠色長廊,實施城市建設區綠色覆蓋系統工程,見縫插綠、拆牆見綠、建園植綠。 強力治污空氣好轉 在改善城市空氣質量、生態環境的同時,太原市還在推進以新城引領下的「五城聯動」,提升城市的質素。當然除了硬環境,還包括軟環境。太原市規定,今後凡是公民、法人或其他組織能夠自主決定,市場競爭機制能夠有效調節,行業組織或中介機構能夠自律管理的事項,政府一律不設定審批;凡是可以採用事後監管和間接管理方式的事項,政府一律不設定審批;凡是中央、省下放到市級政府審批的承接事項,涉及市縣的一律下放到「一市三縣」。凡是量大面廣的便民服務類事項,地方政府實施更方便更有效,全部下放到區。 同時,加快電子政務建設,實現流程再造向縣(市、區)、開發區的延伸,形成鼓勵高新技術產業和現代服務業發展的體制機制,深化工商登記、投融資體制、土地、開發區、科技等領域的改革,讓一切勞動、知識、技術、管理、資本的活力競相迸發,讓一切創造社會財富的源泉充分湧流。 太原市中長期的目標是要著力建成環渤海地區知名宜居宜迷你倉城市,讓太原成為京津及沿海產業轉移最佳承接地,讓前來投資興業的有識之士進得來、留得住。 五城聯動加快一流省會城市建設步伐 城市是人類文明的主體,城鎮化是現代化的必由之路。「人們來到城市,是為了生活。人們居住在城市,是為了生活得更好」。太原市作為山西省會城市,可以說代表了這個省的形象。 「唐風晉韻•錦繡龍城•清涼太原」的城市特色定位,太原市長耿彥波認為這完全符合以人為本的時代價值觀,符合太原五千年文脈延續的歷史邏輯,也符合太原「三面環山、一水中分」山水脈絡的大自然格局。太原市堅持新城引領下的「五城」聯動,建設山、水、城、林、人和諧共融,「讓居民望得見山、看得見水、記得住鄉愁」。 新城 太原今年將加快汾東新區、晉陽新區建設,加快濱河東路南延、汾河三期南延、晉陽湖改造及山西科技創新城配套基礎設施建設,完善體制機制和配套服務,把南部新城建成全省乃至環渤海地區創業、創造、創意、創新的樂園。 老城 要加大城中村和棚戶區改造力度,實施地鐵、建設路及南沙河快速化改造、大外環等城市交通建設,綜合整治小街小巷,推進公交都市建設,並進一步優化城市空間結構和城鎮化布局,使生產空間集約高效、生活空間宜居適度、生態空間山清水秀。 古城 文化是城市的靈魂,歷史是城市的資本。太原有著2500年的建城史,歷史遺存多,文化資源豐富。今年將加大府城文廟、崇善寺片區、天主教堂片區、五一路片區、鐘樓街片區等四大片區的保護力度,讓掩藏在垃圾建築中的歷史文化遺存,重現高貴的文化價值。按照田園風光與文化遺存相融合的新理念,精心保護好明太原縣城,創造歷史文化遺存保護的新範例。完善提升晉祠、太山龍泉寺、雙塔寺大景區,加快太化工業遺址在保護中實現創造性轉化、創新性發展,傳統與現代整合,工業文明與時尚文明交匯,創意文化和展示文化協同,創造城市工業文明富有活力的新名片。 山城 要進一步打響「唐風晉韻、錦繡龍城、清涼太原」品牌,加大東西山增綠出彩力度的同時,發展文化、旅遊、休閒、避暑、養老等產業。 縣城 要把生態建設擺在更加突出的位置,推動形成各具特色、和而不同、功能互補的產業發展格局。 建宜居、幸福保障房 今年,太原市政府將繼續從教育、醫療、養老、住房等方面改善民生。教育方面,加快五中、三中、一外、二外、十二中等10所名校雙十二軌新校區建設,完成二十七、五十三、六十中等10所學校校舍危房改擴建工程,強制性規範配建幼兒園、小學,滿足宜居城市基礎服務半徑。醫療養老方面,加快中心醫院、人民醫院、婦幼保健院等10所醫院的新院建設,強制性規範配建社區醫院、社區醫療中心,建立便民、利民健康服務體系。住房方面,太原市今年再開工建設5萬套安置型保障住房,連同去年總數達到10萬套,並在兩年內實現拆遷戶全部安置。 耿彥波介紹說,政府的安置小區有幼稚園、小學甚至中學,並配設鄰里中心,該中心是個包括購物中心、老人活動中心、幼兒園活動中心、文化閱覽室等在內的社區綜合體。他認為,宜居、幸福、滿足群眾各種需求的小區才是建設一流省會城市的小區,這也是落實「徵收誰、改變誰、造福誰」的惠民目標。 投資170億實施22項工程 城市基礎設施建設,不僅將拉大城市框架,擴大城市容量、完善城市功能、提高城市綜合承載力,同時將有力引領產業發展和城市發展。 2014年,太原市將在去年新建改造道路的基礎上,繼續推進城市道路的建設,新建、續建濱河東路南延,建設路(太榆路)快速化改造,晉陽湖環湖北路建設、晉陽湖環湖西路建設等、太行路南延、南中環與環城高速互通立交、府東街與建設路互通及配套路網完善、北中環與東環高速互通立交、北中環與解放路立交配套路網完善、長治路改造、府東府西街和並州路微循環路網完善工程等22項工程,總計建設里程110公里,總投資170億元。mini storage
