HEFEI, Aug. 27 (Xinhua) -- Groundbreaking began Wednesday for an airport
close to Mount Jiuhua, one of the four sacred mountains of Chinese Buddhism,
local authorities said Thursday.
China will invest more than 600 million yuan (87.8 million U.S. dollars) in
the airport based in the eastern Anhui Province. It started construction
Wednesday and was expected to be completed by the end of 2011, said Shen
Zejiang, deputy director of the east China regional administration of Civil
Aviation Administration of China.
The airport, 20 kilometers from the Mount Jiuhua scenic spot and Chizhou
city seat, covers an area of 213 hectares. It is expected to receive 500,000
tourists by 2020 and 1.45 million tourists by 2040, he said.
The airport is expected to build a 2.4 km long and 45 meters wide runway
and a 10,000 square meter terminal. It will be able to handle Boeing 737s and
Airbus 320s, he said.
The airport will open routes to Chinese major cities including Shanghai,
Beijing and Guangzhou, and also routes to the Republic of Korea, Japan and
Singapore, from where many Buddhist believers come to Mount Jiuhua for
pilgrimage annually.
Mount Jiuhua, literally "Nine Glorious Mountains", together with Wutai
Moutain in north China's Shanxi Province, E'mei Mountain in southwest China's
Sichuan Province and Putuo Mountain in east China's Zhejiang Province, are the
four great Buddhist mountains in China.