Hermes' signature saddle commands pride of place in the center of the hall surrounded by Haut a Courroies, Bolide and Polochon bags while a forest of plaster hands reaching out from the floor supports more Kelly and Birkin bags.
Visitors admiring the 6.5-meter-high giant baby, Miguelin, in the Spain Pavilion may be surprised to realize that it was not the concept of a famous designer or a group of groundbreaking engineers. It came from one filmmaker's interpretation of the meaning of "Better City, Better Life".
Evening falls and French photographer Julian de Hauteclocque Howe is ready to create his own fairytale story of The Little Mermaid at the pond of the Denmark Pavilion in the Expo Garden.
Zhao Wenguang sees his job as contributing to the Expo, Yu Ran reports.
Huaqiao International Business Service Park is the only provincial development area in China characterized by a dominant modern service industry. It will provide services for businesses in Shanghai and establish an outsourcing service base and a national financial outsourcing demonstration zone.
Some online advertisements for housekeeping services, specifically services for vacant dwellings, have appeared in Beijing since the local government announced its plan to investigate vacant dwellings in the city.
Following the success of its recently launched microblog, the city's Public Security Bureau wants online fans and critics to turn up for a real-world meeting later this month to talk about its Internet presence.
Some people with a hankering to get out of the capital during the Mid-Autumn Festival and National Day Holiday are finding they have already left it too late to book the trip they want.
If there was a vote for the most unscrupulous profession in Beijing, I am sure there could be a lot of potential winners. I know people that would say it is taxi drivers or clothes sellers but, if I cast a vote, it would solidly be for housing agents.
Glassy-eyed and mindlessly content, I've spent more than my fair share of evenings sitting and staring at cookie-cutter sitcoms on TV. At least, I did, before moving to Beijing.
The somewhat daunting images of monsters permanently etched under his skin peep out from his sleeves just enough to arouse both awe and curiosity. His hair is long and tousled, and his clothing style is biker cool. But beneath the image, tattoo artist Tian Ju (or Lao Tian as he is more commonly referred to) is anything but the intimidating man he is perceived to be.
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