Himalayas Center
Himalayas Center Shanghai
Himalayas Center Shanghai
Aug 29th
Shanghai New International Expo Center, located in No.2345 Longyang Road, Pudong New Area, Shanghai, is the largest exhibition center in Shanghai.
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Aug 29th
| No. | Event Name | Show Time | Hall No. |
| China Sourcing Fair: Fashion Accessories, Baby & Children’s Products, Gifts & Premiums | Jan 13 -15 | W1-W2 | |
| East China Import & Export Commodity Fair | Mar 1-5 | W1-W5,E1-E5 | |
| Fashion shanghai 2010-16th Shanghai International Clothing&Textile Expo | Mar 10 -12 | W3-W4 | |
| The 17th China Int’l Hardware & Welding Fair | Mar 10 -12 | W1-W2,E1-E6 | |
| electronica & Productronica China /LASER. World of Photonics China /SEMICON CHINA/CPCA | Mar 16 -18 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| DOMOTEX asia / CHINAFLOOR 2010 | Mar 23- 25 | W1-W2,E1-E5 | |
| China Sustainable Building Forum 2010 / The 8th Shanghai Int’l Landscape Design & Urban Construction Expo | Mar 23-25 | W3 | |
| R+T Asia 2010 | Mar 23 – 25 | W4-W5 | |
| Expo Build 2010 /Hotelex Shanghai 2010 | Mar 29 – Apr1 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| STONETEC | Apr 6- 9 | W1-W4 | |
| Shanghai Int’l Jewellery Exhibition | Apr 9- 12 | E4-E5 | |
| The 92st China Silk Trade Fair | Apr 11 -13 | E1-E3 | |
| Chinaplas | Apr 19 -22 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| The 3nd China(ShanghaiInternational Wind Energy Exhibition & Symposium /Power China | Apr 27 -29 | E4-E6 | |
| China International Bicycle & Motor Cycle Fair | Apr 27 -30 | W1-W5,E1-E3 | |
| IFAT China + EPTEE + CWS | May 5 – 7 | E1-E2 | |
| SNEC International Solar and PV Conference & Exhibition | May 5 -7 | W1-W5 | |
| Busworld Asia 2010 | May 6 -8 | E5-E6 | |
| Bakery China | May 12 -15 | E1-E6 | |
| China International Exhibition on Mould & Die, Equipment and related Industry | May 11 -15 | W1-W5 | |
| Shanghai Hair & Beauty Festival | May 19 -21 | W1-W5 | |
| SIAL CHINA / CHINA PACKTECH & FOODTECH 2010 | May 19 -21 | E1-E4 | |
| Metro China / Tunnel China | May 19 -21 | E5-E6 | |
| China Building & Construction Trade Fair & Its Sister Themes Fair | May 26 -29 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| CPhI China | Jun 2 – 4 | E1-E6 | |
| Fi-Asia China | Jun 2 – 4 | W1-W2 | |
| China Sourcing Fair: China Sourcing Fair – Electronics | Jun 2 – 4 | W3 | |
| The 8th China (Shanghai) Int’l Furniture Expo 2010 | Jun 2 – 4 | W4-W5 | |
| China Shanghai International Textiles Fabrics & Accessories Exhibition /China (Shanghai) International Fashion Production (OEM) Exhibition | Jun 8 -10 | E3 | |
| Transport Logistics China | Jun 8 -10 | E1-E2 | |
| China Stationery Commodity Fair | Jun 10 -12 | W1-W2 | |
| ALUMINIUM CHINA | Jun 9 -11 | W4-W5 | |
| ITMA | Jun 22 -26 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| Apppexpo | Jul 7–10 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| PROPACK China | Jul14–16 | W1-W3 | |
| EASTPO International Machine Tool Fair | Jul15–18 | E1-E6 | |
| China Daily-use Articles Trade Fair/China International Modern Home Expo | Jul22-24 | W1-W4 | |
| Children-Baby-Maternity Products Expo Children Clothing and Accessories Expo 2010 | Jul 22 -24 | E1-E6 | |
| China Digital Entertainment Expo & Conference | Jul 29 -Aug1 | W1-W3 | |
| Shanghai International Automotive Manufacturing Technology & Material Show 2010 | Aug 11-14 | E1 | |
| ALL IN AUTO 2010 | Aug 12 -15 | W1-W2 | |
| The 21th Shanghai International Construction Material and Indoor Decoration Exhibition /5th Shanghai International Energy-saving & Construction Material Exhibition | Aug 17-20 | E1-E3 | |
| China International Trade Fair for Hometextiles and Accessories | Aug 24 -26 | W1-W5,E1-E5 | |
| China International Knitting Trade Fair | Aug 24 - 26 | E5 | |
| All China Leather Exhibition/China International Footwear Fair / Moda Shanghai | Sep 1 - 3 | E1-E6 | |
| China International Offshore Oil & Gas Exhibition/China International Petroleum & Petrochemical Technology and Equipment Exhibition | Sep 1 - 3 | W4-W5 | |
| China International Furniture Expo | Sep 7 -10 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| Paper world | Sep 15 -17 | E1-E3 | |
| Shanghai Int’l PU Exhibition / 2010 Shanghai Int’l New Flame-retarding and Fire-proofing Technology, Materials Industry Exhibition | Sep 15 -17 | E3 | |
| Analytical | Sep 15 – 17 | W1-W3,E1-E3 | |
| The 10th China International Chemical Industry Fair | Sep 15 – 17 | W3-W4 | |
| Wire China 2010 / Tube China 2010 | Sep 21 – 24 | W1-W3,E1-E3 | |
| RE China | Sep 27 – 29 | E5-E6 | |
| China International Hardware Show | Sep 28 – 30 | W1-W5,E1-E4 | |
| Music China 2010 | Oct 12 – 15 | E1-E6 | |
| Prolight Sound Shanghai 2010 | Oct 12 – 15 | W1-W2 | |
| 7th INTERNATIONAL TRADE for TOYS, HOBBY & BABY ARTICLES | Oct 12 – 14 | W3-W5 | |
| 2010 China International Trade Fair for Apparel Fabrics and Accessories | Oct 19 -22 | W1-W5,E1-E6 | |
| PTC ASIA /CeMAT ASIA | Oct 25 -28 | W1-W3,E1-E6 | |
| China (Shanghai)International Doors Industry Expo | Oct 26 -28 | W4-W5 | |
| The 12th China International Industry Fair | November | W1-W5,E1-E4 | |
| 75th CEF & 2010 AEES | November | W1-W5 | |
| FHC china 2010 | Nov 10 -12 | E5-E7 | |
| China International Tourism Fair | Nov 18 -21 | W1-W5 | |
| Bauma China | Nov 23 -26 | W5, E1-E6 | |
| 2010 Shanghai International Petroleum Petrifaction Natural Gas & Fuel refilling、Storage Technology Equipment and Explosion-proof Industry Exhibition | Nov 25 -27 | W3-W4 | |
| Asian Pacific Int’l Plastic & Rubber Industry Exhibition | Nov 25 -27 | W1-W2 | |
| 2010 Shanghai International Heat&Sound Insulation and Outer-Wall Tech&Dry Mixed Motar Industry Expo | Nov30-Dec2 | W1 | |
| Shanghai International Trade Fair for Automotive Parts, Equipment and Services Suppliers (Automechanika Shanghai) | Dec 8 -11 | W1-W5,E1-E5 |
Aug 29th
| Basic Info | Name | Shanghai New International Expo Center | ||
| Brief Introduction |
The design for SNIEC includes 17 halls and a tower having a total area of 250,000 square meters, including 200,000 square meters of indoor space and 50,000 square meters of open air space. Each exhibition hall measures 11,547 square meters. The exhibition halls are column-free with a clear height of 11 meters in a one-story construction which will allow all exhibitors an up-to-date presentation. Phase I has been completed, representing a US$ 99 million investment and about one fourth of the entire project.The exhibition halls will be equipped with modern communication facilities,movable partitions, utilities, offices, snack bars, restaurants and crate storage. Every exhibition hall will also have convenient direct loading and unloading for trucks. Customers will have a range of business services, including a business center, a post office, a bank, a customs office, couriers and freight forwarders, and an advertising agency. The entrance is designed to ensure the smooth flow of visitors to different exhibition halls, and to handle registration, information services, coffee breaks, and business talks. | |||
| Location | Country | China | Province | Shanghai |
| City | Shanghai | Postcode | 201204 | |
| Address | No.2345 Longyang Road, Pudong New Area, Shanghai 201204, China | |||
| Contact Info |
Linkman | Fu Jie | ||
| Phone | 021-28906666 | Fax | 8621-28906777 | |
| info@sniec.net | ||||
| HTTP URL | http://www.sniec.net | |||
| Remark | ||||
| Hall | Hall Number | 7 | Floor Number | 1 |
| Total Area | 250000(Indoor:80500, Outdoor:45000) | |||
| Standard Booths | 4480 | Buildings | 2 | |
| Meeting Room | Number | 22 | Total Area | 7800 |
| Maximum Room | ||||
| Other Room | ||||
| Business Center | Tel : +86 21 28906072/3/4/5/6 | |||
| Storeroom | Total Area | 0 | ||
| Remark | ||||
| Passageway | Number | 70 | ||
| Maximum Passageway Dimension | 5m×4m | |||
| Minimum Passageway Dimension | 5m×4m | |||
| Technic Illuminate |
Ground Bearing | |||
| Indoor Height | W1―W4 : 11-17m W5 : 17-23m |
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| Voltage | 380V/220V, 50HZ | |||
| Power Supply | ||||
| Water Supply | ||||
| Drain | ||||
| Gas Supply | Yes | |||
| Air-Condition | Yes | |||
| Comunication Equipment | ISDN(128K)、Wireless Internet Cable(11M)、Internet Cable(10M) | |||
| New Technology | ||||
| Others | ||||
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Aug 29th
Airlines![]() |
Destinations |
|---|---|
| Aeroflot-Cargo | Novosibirsk |
| Air China Cargo | Beijing-Capital, Copenhagen, Los Angeles, Milan-Malpensa, Manchester, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Portland (OR), Vienna |
| Air France | Paris-Charles de Gaulle |
| Air Hong Kong | Hong Kong |
| AirBridgeCargo Airlines | Krasnoyarsk |
| ANA & JP Express | |
| Atlas Air | Chicago-O’Hare, Frankfurt, Honolulu, Melbourne, New York-JFK, Sydney |
| Cargolux | Luxembourg |
| China Cargo Airlines | |
| China Southern Cargo | Los Angeles [begins 28 August][10] |
| El Al Cargo | Tel Aviv |
| Emirates SkyCargo | Dubai |
| EVA Air Cargo | Taipei-Taoyuan |
| FedEx Express | Anchorage, Beijing-Capital, Guangzhou |
| Great Wall Airlines | Amsterdam, Chennai, Mumbai , Manchester |
| JAL Cargo | Tokyo-Narita |
| KLM Cargo operated by Martinair Cargo | Amsterdam, Moscow-Sheremetyevo [resumes 1 September] |
| Lufthansa Cargo | |
| MASkargo | Amsterdam, Basel/Mulhouse, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Tashkent |
| Nippon Cargo Airlines | Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita |
| Polar Air Cargo | Osaka-Kansai |
| SAS Cargo Group | Beijing-Capital, Copenhagen |
| Shanghai Airlines Cargo | |
| Singapore Airlines Cargo | Los Angeles, Singapore |
| TNT Airways | Liège, Singapore |
| UPS Airlines | Shen Zhen, Anchorage, Osaka, Tokyo |
| Volga-Dnepr | Abakan |
Ground transportation
Transrapid constructed the first commercial high-speed maglev railway in the world, from the Pudong International Airport to Longyang Road Metro station. It was inaugurated in 2002. It has a peak speed of 431 km/h and a track length of 30 km. A transportation center will be built in Phase 3, and will become operational in 2015. The extension of the Shanghai Metro Line 2 to Pudong International Airport has finished construction. Pudong International Airport and Shanghai Hongqiao Airport are linked by subway.
Aug 29th
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Cities with international airlink to Shanghai Pudong International Airport
The airport had 28 boarding bridges along with 127 parking positions and with a tarmac of 1.49 million square meters prior to the opening of Terminal 2. It also has two runways; the 4000-meter runway on category 4E and the 3800-meter runway with a category 4F rating, able to handle the Airbus A380. It is also predicted that the third runway will be on a 4F rating.
Terminal 1 was opened on October 1, 1999 along with a 4000m runway and including a cargo hub. It was built to handle the demand for traffic and to relieve Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport’s traffic. Terminal 1 is shaped like Kansai International Airport’s terminal, but it is shorter and with 28 gates, 13 of which are double decker gates. The exterior of the terminal is shaped like waves. The capacity of Terminal 1 is 20 million passengers. It currently has 204 check-in counters, thirteen luggage conveying belts and covering an area of 280,000 square meters. Terminal 1 has received some controversy about the lack of shopping stalls, the pricing of the shops, confusing locations of restrooms, the escalators and passenger difficulty of moving through the terminal.
Terminal 2, opened at the 26th of March 2008, along with the 3rd runway, gives a capacity of 60 million passengers and 4.2 million tonnes of cargo annually. Terminal 2 is shaped like the 1st terminal but it has more of a seagull shaping, rather than a wave shape and is slightly larger than Terminal 1. Terminal 2 will be used for Air China, Shanghai Airlines and other Star Alliance members but it is known that some SkyTeam and Oneworld members will relocate their operations to the terminal.
Airlines![]() |
Destinations | Terminal![]() |
|---|---|---|
| Aeroflot | Moscow-Sheremetyevo | 2 |
| Aeroméxico | Mexico City, Tijuana | 2 |
| Air Canada | Toronto-Pearson, Vancouver | 2 |
| Air China | Bangalore, Beijing-Capital, Chengdu, Chongqing, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Guilin, Guiyang, Jiuzhaigou, Melbourne, Milan-Malpensa, Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Kansai, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Sendai, Shenzhen, Sydney, Taipei-Taoyuan, Tokyo-Narita, Wenzhou, Wuhan, Xi’an, Yichang, Yinchuan | 2 |
| Air Koryo | Pyongyang [charter][7][8] | 2 |
| Air France | Paris-Charles de Gaulle | 1 |
| Air India | Delhi, Mumbai [ends 31 October] | 2 |
| Air Macau | Macau | 2 |
| Air New Zealand | Auckland | 2 |
| All Nippon Airways | Nagoya-Centrair [ends 31 October][9], Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita | 2 |
| American Airlines | Chicago-O’Hare | 2 |
| Asiana Airlines | Busan, Seoul-Incheon | 2 |
| British Airways | London-Heathrow | 2 |
| Cathay Pacific Airways | Hong Kong | 2 |
| Cebu Pacific | Manila | 2 |
| China Airlines | Kaohsiung, Taipei-Taoyuan | 1 |
| China Eastern Airlines | Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Beihai, Beijing-Capital, Busan, Changchun, Chengdu, Chifeng, Chongqing, Daegu, Dalian, Delhi, Frankfurt, Fukuoka, Fukushima, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Guilin, Haikou, Harbin, Hiroshima, Hong Kong, Jeju, Jiayuguan, Kagoshima, Komatsu, Kuala Lumpur, Kunming, Lhasa, London-Heathrow, Los Angeles, Matsuyama, Melbourne, Moscow-Sheremetyevo, Nagasaki, Nagoya-Centrair, Naha, Nanchang, Nanjing, New York-JFK, Niigata, Ningbo, Okayama, Osaka-Kansai, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Qingdao, Sanya, Sapporo-Chitose, Seoul-Incheon, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Singapore, Sydney, Taipei-Taoyuan, Tokyo-Narita, Vancouver, Wenzhou, Wuhan, Xi’an, Xining, Yichang, Yinchuan, Yulin, Zhangjiajie, Zhengzhou, Zhuhai | 1 |
| China Southern Airlines | Changchun, Dalian, Dandong, Daegu, Daqing, Guangzhou, Haikou, Harbin, Jiamusi, Kalibo, Kunming, Mudanjiang, Nagoya-Centrair, Qiqihar, Sanya, Seoul-Incheon, Shantou, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Taipei-Taoyuan, Wuhan, Xi’an, Zhangjiajie, Zhengzhou, Zhuhai | 2 |
| Continental Airlines | Newark | 2 |
| Delta Air Lines | Detroit, Tokyo-Narita | 2 |
| Dragonair | Hong Kong | 2 |
| Emirates | Dubai | 2 |
| EVA Air | Kaohsiung, Taipei-Taoyuan | 2 |
| Finnair | Helsinki | 2 |
| Garuda Indonesia | Jakarta-Soekarno-Hatta, Denpasar/Bali | 2 |
| Grand China Express | Dongying, Weifang | 1 |
| Hainan Airlines | Brussels, Haikou, Xi’an | 1 |
| Hong Kong Express Airways | Hong Kong | 2 |
| Japan Airlines | Nagoya-Centrair, Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita | 1 |
| Japan Airlines operated by JAL Express | Osaka-Kansai | 1 |
| Juneyao Airlines | Beihai, Changchun, Dalian, Fuzhou, Guilin, Harbin, Nanchang, Qingdao, Shenyang, Wenzhou, Xiamen, Xi’an | 1 |
| KLM | Amsterdam | 1 |
| Korean Air | Busan, Seoul-Incheon | 1 |
| Lufthansa | Frankfurt, Munich | 2 |
| Malaysia Airlines | Kuala Lumpur | 2 |
| Philippine Airlines | Manila | 2 |
| Qantas Airways | Sydney | 2 |
| Qatar Airways | Doha | 2 |
| Royal Brunei Airlines | Bandar Seri Begawan | 1 |
| Shandong Airlines | Qingdao | 2 |
| Shanghai Airlines | Anqing, Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Busan, Cebu, Changchun, Changsha, Chengdu, Chongqing, Dalian, Denpasar/Bali, Guilin, Haikou, Hanoi, Harbin, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Huangshan, Jiayuguan, Jinzhou, Macau, Male, Mudanjiang, Osaka-Kansai, Phnom Penh, Qinhuangdao, Qingdao, Saipan [seasonal], Sanya, Seoul-Incheon, Shenyang, Taipei-Songshan, Toyama, Wanxian, Weihai, Wuhan, Xi’an, Xiangfan, Yantai, Zhangjiajie | 2 |
| Shenzhen Airlines | Jinjiang/Quanzhou, Shenzhen | 1 |
| Sichuan Airlines | Chengdu, Chongqing | 1 |
| Singapore Airlines | Singapore | 2 |
| Spring Airlines | Changchun, Chongqing, Dalian, Fuzhou, Guilin, Haikou, Harbin, Lanzhou, Qingdao, Sanya, Shenyang, Wuhan, Xi’ an, Zhangjiajie | 1 |
| SriLankan Airlines | Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi, Colombo | 2 |
| Swiss International Air Lines | Zürich | 2 |
| Thai Airways International | Bangkok-Suvarnabhumi | 2 |
| Transasia Airways | Taichung, Taipei-Songshan, Taipei-Taoyuan | 2 |
| Turkish Airlines | Istanbul-Atatürk | 2 |
| United Airlines | Chicago-O’Hare, San Francisco | 2 |
| Vietnam Airlines | Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City | 2 |
| Virgin Atlantic Airways | London-Heathrow | 2 |
| Xiamen Airlines | Fuzhou, Wuyishan | 1 |
Aug 29th
Shanghai Pudong International Airport (IATA: PVG, ICAO: ZSPD) (SSE: 600009) (simplified Chinese: 上海浦东国际机场; traditional Chinese: 上海浦東國際機場; pinyin: Shànghǎi Pǔdōng Guójì Jīchǎng) is a major aviation hub in Asia, particularly in the East Asian region, and is the primary international airport serving Shanghai of the People’s Republic of China. Located about 30 kilometres (19 miles) from the city centre, it occupies a 40 square kilometres (15 square miles) site adjacent to the coastline in the eastern edge of Pudong district within the boundaries of the Shanghai Municipality.
The airport is the main hub for China Eastern Airlines and Shanghai Airlines, and a major international hub for Air China. Pudong airport is organised around two main passenger terminals, flanked on both sides by three parallel runways. Current airport masterplans call for the building of a third passenger terminal, a satellite terminal and two additional runways by 2015, raising its capacity from the current 60 million passengers annually to 80 million, along with the ability to handle six million tonnes of air freight.[3] A station for the Shanghai Maglev Train is sited between the passenger terminals, providing the world’s first commercial high-speed maglev service to downtown Pudong in 7 minutes and 20 seconds. The airport is open 24 hours, one of only a few Chinese airports to be so.
Shanghai Pudong International Airport is a major hub for cargo traffic in the world. With 2,539,284 metric tonnes handled in 2009, the airport is the 3rd busiest airport in the world in terms of freight traffic. A total of 31.9 million passengers passed through the airport in 2009, making the airport the 3rd busiest in mainland China. However, it handles more international passengers than Beijing Capital International Airport,[4] currently the busiest Chinese airport in terms of total passengers handled, with 17,518,790 international passengers handled in 2007, a 9.0% increase over the previous year.
Prior to the establishment of Pudong International Airport, Hongqiao International Airport was the primary airport of Shanghai. During the 1990s, the expansion of Hongqiao was impossible as the urban area surrounding Hongqiao was developing significantly. As a result, the government had to seek an alternative for Hongqiao International Airport to take all of its international flights. A suitable site was at the coast of the Pudong development zone to the east of Shanghai.
The airport opened on October 1, 1999, replacing Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport as Shanghai’s international airport and taking over all of its international flights, including regional flights to Hong Kong and Macau. The first phase of the airport began in October 1997 and took two years to build at a cost of RMB 12 billion (1.67 billion USD). It covers an area of 40 kilometers squared and is around 30 km from downtown Shanghai. The first phase of the airport has one 4E category runway (4000 m x 60 m) along with two parallel taxiways, an 800,000 m2 apron, seventy-six aircraft positions and 50,000 m2 cargo warehouse.
The second and third runways were opened on March 17, 2005 and March 26, 2008 respectively, and a fourth runway is in planning stage. The second terminal was opened on March 26, 2008 and the third terminal is currently at planning stage. The master plan calls for a total of three terminals, two satellite halls, and five parallel runways, ultimately for a capacity of 100 million passengers per year.
Limited international services resumed at Hongqiao Airport in October 2007 with flights to Tokyo International Airport (Haneda), in November 2007 with flights to Gimpo International Airport in Seoul, and in June 2010 with flights to Taipei Songshan Airport. This is believed to be a major effort to provide convenience to business travelers, a practice already in place between Haneda and Gimpo for years. Hongqiao, Haneda, Gimpo, and Songshan are much closer to their respective metro centers than their newer but remote international gateways Pudong, Narita, Incheon, and Taoyuan.
In 2004, the airport handled nearly 500 flights per day, carrying more than 21 million passengers per year in and out of China’s most populated city. Shanghai Pudong International Airport is ranked sixth-busiest in terms of cargo traffic, and 28th in terms of in international passenger traffic. It is also ranked 40th in Passenger traffic, carrying 26,790,826 passengers in and out of the airport. It is the eighth-busiest airport in Asia in passenger traffic.
Shanghai Pudong International Airport had recently experienced massive increases, thus never falling below a 10% growth rate of cargo. From 2002–2003, it had seen near double growth of cargo traffic; 87.3% in that period. From 2002–2006, it has risen from 26th place to 6th place in cargo traffic, with cargo traffic tripling since 2002. In 2006, it had a growth rate of 16.8% while Narita (Tokyo) experienced a -0.5% decrease and Incheon with an 8.7% increase. It may surpass Narita International Airport within a few years and Incheon International Airport to become fourth place in cargo and later Hong Kong International Airport, which is the busiest cargo hub in Asia and second-largest in the world. Complementing that, UPS and DHL will be adding hubs in the next few years and therefore, Pudong will become the first airport to have two international cargo express hubs.
Pudong sees many aircraft movements during rush hour times, resulting in most planes having to park on the apron. To alleviate this, construction of phase two (including a 2nd terminal, a third runway and a cargo terminal) started during December 2005 and was fully complete in time for the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics; Shanghai Airport Authority played a major role with improvement of facilities.. The architects of Terminal 2 chose to use many world-renowned interior finishes such as Bentley Prince Street and Brinton carpets for this new terminal.
Terminal 2, located behind Terminal 1, opened on March 26, 2008 (same day as the official opening of Terminal 3 at Beijing Capital International Airport), adding an additional capacity of 40 million passengers a year. Once phase two is fully complete, it will give Pudong a capacity of 60 million passengers and 4.2 million tonnes of cargo annually[5]. A transportation center will be added to connect passengers between Terminal 1 and 2 in the future.
Shanghai Airlines moved to Terminal 2 upon its opening on March 26, 2008 with 14 other airlines, including Air India, Northwest Airlines, Qatar Airways, Alitalia, British Airways, Qantas Airways, Virgin Atlantic Airways, Philippine Airlines, Malaysia Airlines, Transaero Airlines, Cebu Pacific, Aerosvit Airlines, Garuda Indonesia and Royal Nepal Airlines. Fellow Star Alliance partners Air Canada, Air China, Air New Zealand, ANA, Asiana Airlines, Lufthansa, Singapore Airlines, Thai Airways and United Airlines have moved on April 29, 2008[6] along with other airlines, involving 33 airlines in all now operating at Terminal 2[5].
The next ambitious expansion, includes the addition of the fourth and fifth runways, a Satellite concourse, larger than the size of both of the current terminals combined, and additional cargo terminals will expand the size of Pudong International Airport. Land reclamation will be included for the fifth runway and some of the cargo terminals. Because of this, a large amount of money will be needed in the future to cope with the demand. This next ambition will be completed by 2015 and will become one of the world-class airports in the world. It will become one of the world’s largest airports by land size.
Recently, China Southern Airlines stated that Shanghai Pudong International Airport will be home to its five Airbus A380s, however there is no statement if China Southern Airlines will have a hub in Shanghai Pudong International Airport.
Starting January 1st 2011, Emirates will operate A380 services to Pudong.
Aug 22nd

This hotel villa property is located in Ubud, Bali’s art and cultural center. It is built like a traditional Balinese village. The resort has 58 luxury villas and enjoys a magical hillside setting above the banks of the Petanu River on the island of Bali.
Villas are individually crafted in rich woods, adorned with Indonesian furnishings and surrounded by lush green, spring-fed gardens.
Every villa bedroom comes with a 4 poster king bed or twin beds veiled in mosquito netting. Each luxury villa also has a Bale Bengong and some have private swimming pools.
Kamandalu Facilities
The Kamandalu Hotel has 3 dining outlets and a pool bar. The restaurant serves Indonesian and international cuisine.
Other facilities include a main swimming pool, tennis court, games room and trekking.
Kamandalu Spa
The spa offers a range of traditional Balinese and other treatments.
Stone Massage, 60 minutes
This combination of Eastern & Western Massage uses specially heated stones to relax the nerves, tissues and improve blood circulation.
Coconut and Sesame Infusion, 30 minutes
Fresh coconut flakes and ground sesame moisturize your skin with soft natural oils while gently removing dead skin cells on the surface.
The Kamandalu Resort and Spa is an ideal place to stay for a romantic and relaxing holiday.
Aug 22nd

The Royal Pita Maha is the newest of the Tjampuhan Hotels chain. The other two hotels being the Pita Maha and the Tjampuhan Spa Hotel, both in Ubud, Bali’s art and cultural center. Royal Pita Maha has 52 luxury villas with stunning views of the surrounding valley scenery. It is built on a slope and staggered all the way down to the Ayung river valley. The villas have huge bathrooms and are very very romantic.
All villas have a pool and are well appointed with all modern and luxurious amenities.
The Royal Pita Maha has 4 top class restaurants and 2 lobby lounges, 2 swimming pools, a holy spring water pool and a spring water lagoon. There is also a meditation bale along the river bank and the hotel has its own organic farm.
This hotel is ideal for honeymooners and couples wanting privacy, luxurious surroundings and a romantic time. The spa, managed by Kirana Spa by Shesido has full day packages and special spa villas with jacuzzis and saunas.
Aug 22nd

Owned and managed by an Australian couple with years of experience in the hotel industry, The Viceroy is an exclusive hotel villa property located in the Lembah Valley in the Ubud area of Bali. From its vantage point high above the Lembah Valley with its forested ravine and rushing river below, you will have unparalleled views of terraced paddy fields and lush Balinese jungle, giving you a deep sense of serenity and peace. Imagine waking up in the morning to beautiful tropical and peaceful scenery of swaying coconut palms. The sounds of the river below and the light breeze gives you a feeling of being in paradise.
Romantic and private, this hotel is perfect for the newly wed and anyone who wants to indulge in the finer things in life.
Lembah Spa
The Lembah Spa offers some of the most indulgent spa treatments once could ever have. A wide range of delicious choices is available from their menu. You can book a treatment and afternoon tea package at the Lembah Spa even if you are not a guest. This is one way to experience this beautiful resort.
Area Information
Ubud is known as Bali’s art and cultural temple with its many temples and religious ceremonies being performed on a daily basis. It is in the district of Gianyar in Central Bali about a 45 minute drive (gradually more and more scenic once out of Denpasar) from the international airport.
What you can do in Ubud
There are many things you can do in Ubud. Visit the Ubud Royal Palace, Ubud market, eclectic bookshops, have dinner at a jazz bar, go on rice field walks, take a walk through the Monkey Forest in central Ubud, sit at numerous cafes serving quality indonesian and western food.
You can also go on tours to places like Kintamani which would be a lot further to travel to get to if you were staying in South bali. If you spend your trip in Ubud, you are halfway there to all the beautiful sights in Bali including Mount Agung where you will find the great Besakih temple.