• Albuquerque
  • Liuzhou

Albuquerque (/ˈælbəkɜːrki/ (listen) AL-bə-kur-kee; Spanish: [alβuˈkeɾke]),[a] abbreviated ABQ, is the most populous city in the U.S. state of New Mexico. Its nicknames, The Duke City and Burque, both reference its founding in 1706 as La Villa de Alburquerque by Nuevo México governor Francisco Cuervo y Valdés. Named in honor of the Viceroy of New Spain, the 10th Duke of Alburquerque, the city was an outpost on El Camino Real linking Mexico City to the northernmost territories of New Spain.

Located in the Albuquerque Basin, the city is flanked by the Sandia Mountains to the east and the West Mesa to the west, with the Rio Grande and bosque flowing from north-to-south. According to the 2020 census, Albuquerque had 564,559 residents, making it the 32nd-most populous city in the United States and the fourth largest in the Southwest. It is the principal city of the Albuquerque metropolitan area, which had 916,528 residents as of July 2020, and forms part of the Albuquerque–Santa Fe–Las Vegas combined statistical area, which numbers 1,162,523 as of January 2020.

Albuquerque is a hub for technology and media companies, historic landmarks, and the fine arts. The city is known for hosting the University of New Mexico, the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, the Gathering of Nations, the New Mexico State Fair, as well as for its diverse restaurant scene, which features both New Mexican cuisine and cuisines from around the world.

Liuzhou, referred to as "Liu" for short, also known as Hucheng and Longcheng, Guangxi's largest industrial city, national Ⅱ metropolis, one of China's five major automobile cities, southwest industrial town, comprehensive transportation hub, trade and logistics center, is the only city in the country with FAW, Dongfeng, SAIC and heavy truck vehicle production enterprises, and an important channel to ASEAN in the interior of China. The cities of processing trade base and logistics transit base for two-way exchanges with ASEAN, the distribution hub city of the southwest sea passage, the important node of the organic connecting portal of "Belt and Road Initiative" and the leading city and core city of the Xijiang economic belt in the western development strategy. Liuzhou is the largest industrial base in Guangxi, and it is also known as the "commercial port of central Guangxi". It is the railway center and regional ensemble that connects southwest and south-central, east and south China.
Airport In Liuzhou - Liuzhou Bailian Airport
Liuzhou Bailian Airport (Liuzhou Bailian Airport, ICAO: ZGZH; IATA: LZH), located in Liujiang District, Liuzhou City, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, 13 kilometers away from Liuzhou City, is a 4C-level military-civilian regional airport      .
Liuzhou Bailian Airport was relocated from Maohe Airport   , was completed and opened to navigation on December 28, 1994, and was named Liuzhou Bailian Airport   , The first phase of the expansion project was completed on December 20, 2016   .
As of December 2016, Liuzhou Bailian Airport has two terminals, namely T1 (suspended) and T2 (Chinese domestic and international Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan) with a total area of ​​22,800 square meters; there is a runway with a length of 2540 meters; 10 seats, which can meet the annual passenger throughput of 1.8 million passengers and 16,000 tons of cargo and mail throughput     . As of March 2019, a total of 17 domestic routes have been opened in China, covering 21 cities   .
In 2020, due to the impact of the global epidemic, the passenger throughput of Liuzhou Bailian Airport was 1,012,900, a year-on-year decrease of 35.5%; the cargo and mail throughput was 5,500 tons, a year-on-year decrease of 36.4%; the number of takeoffs and landings was 11,000, a year-on-year decrease of 20.7% %; respectively ranked 83rd, 71st, and 115th in China   .
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