Administrative and social conditions

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Also known as: T’ien-ching, Tientsin
Wade-Giles romanization:
T’ien-ching
Conventional:
Tientsin

News

Rising sea levels set to displace 45 million people in Hong Kong, Shanghai and Tianjin if earth… Nov. 3, 2024, 8:11 AM ET (South China Morning Post)
China raises US tariff ‘concerns’ as commerce officials meet in Tianjin Oct. 26, 2024, 4:23 AM ET (South China Morning Post)

Government

The Tianjin People’s Congress is the city’s chief administrative body. Its predecessor, the Municipal Revolutionary Committee, was established in 1967 during the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (1966–69). Prior to 1967, responsibility for the management of the city’s affairs was shared by a number of bureaus under both party and governmental control.

The Tianjin Municipal Planning Commission plays a key role in managing industry and commerce. It controls the supply and distribution of industrial raw materials, sets production levels, allocates funds for capital investments, determines manpower needs, supervises product research and development, and coordinates transportation, public works, and environmental policy.

Public utilities

Major public works projects since 1949 helped alleviate chronic flood damage and improved the city’s water supply and sewage disposal systems. Marshy, low-lying lands were drained and converted to agricultural and recreational use, new roads were constructed, and streetlights were installed.

The supply of fresh water has always been a problem because of the city’s location near the sea at low elevation. Severe water shortages developed in the early 1980s because of industrialization, population growth, and drought that cut off the water supply from Miyun Reservoir northeast of Beijing. These shortages were temporarily alleviated by diverting water from the Huang He (Yellow River), to the south, but construction was also undertaken to divert water from the Luan River, to the northeast. The project began in late 1981, and its initial stage was completed in late 1983. Swampy lowlands to the southwest have been drained; one of the most extensive was converted into the large recreational area of the Shuishang Gongyuan (Park on the Water).

Electricity is generated by thermal power plants (fueled with coal), and the city is connected by a power grid with Beijing and Tangshan, Hebei province.

Health

Tianjin has many Western-style and Chinese hospitals, with separate facilities for children, workers, and members of ethnic minorities. During the Cultural Revolution,Tianjin also developed one of China’s earliest and most effective urban planned birth programs. In 1971 an Office of Planned Births was established by the municipality and was granted status and authority equal to the Department of Public Health.

Education

Before the Cultural Revolution about one-sixth of Tianjin’s population was enrolled in educational institutions. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, enrollments fell. By the late 1970s, to support China’s modernization program, considerable investments had been made to improve and expand scientific and technical institutions, especially those supportive of petrochemical, iron and steel, and marine services and engineering industries. The general universities of Nankai and Tianjin are located in Nankai district, on the southwestern periphery of the city. Other higher educational institutions include the Polytechnic University, the University of Technology, the Academy of Fine Arts, the Conservatory of Music, a medical university, a normal university, and other colleges and universities. Work-study schools attached to factories supplement formal educational programs.

Cultural life

The city has several museums and a major library. The Fine Arts Museum is noted for its collection of Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasty paintings, while the City Museum of History and the Tianjin Science Hall have more contemporary displays. The Tianjin Library is the municipality’s largest library.

Special exhibits are held at the Industrial Exhibition Hall and the National Minorities’ Cultural Palace, and the People’s Festival Hall is used for operas, plays, and concerts. The largest movie house is the Peace Cinema. There is also an astronomical observatory.

There are several dozen parks and recreation centres. Victory Park and the Children’s Park are in the centre of the city, and the Xigu, Nankai, People’s, Changhong, Shuishang, and Beining parks are in the urbanized area. Recreational clubs have been built for industrial workers, and there are several stadiums—including the Tianjin Olympic Center Stadium, built to host preliminary football (soccer) matches during the 2008 Olympic Games.

Tianjin is also home to one of the world’s tallest buildings, the 97-story Tianjin CTF Finance Centre.