Lhasa River Water Conservancy Scenic Area is located in Lhasa City, built on the comprehensive management project of Lhasa River City, belonging to the urban river and lake water conservancy scenic area. The scenic spot takes the ecological and humanistic landscape on both sides of the Lhasa River urban area as the main body of the scenic spot, forming three functional partitions of citizens' leisure, commercial culture and tourism culture.
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Lhasa River Water Conservancy Scenic Area is located in Lhasa City, built on the comprehensive management project of Lhasa River City, belonging to the urban river and lake water conservancy scenic area. The scenic spot takes the ecological and humanistic landscape on both sides of the Lhasa River urban area as the main body of the scenic spot, forming three functional partitions of citizens' leisure, commercial culture and tourism culture.
The Tibetan language of Lhasa River is called "Jiqu", meaning "Happy River, Happy River", which breeds the people of Lhasa and flows through the main grain producing areas of Tibet. The construction plan of the Lhasa River Water Conservancy Scenic Area is based on the ecological construction of "colorful Hada green jade belt". The scenic spot takes the ecological and humanistic landscape on both sides of the Lhasa River urban area as the main body of the scenic spot, forming three functional partitions of citizens' leisure, commercial culture and tourism culture. It has become a new tourist economic growth point in Lhasa, driving economic development along the river and the entire Lhasa tourism fast food leisure. It is expected that by 2020, the annual tourist volume of Lhasa Water Conservancy Scenic Area will reach 1 million visitors, becoming another major engine for the development of Lhasa tourism.
Lhasa River Water Conservancy Scenic Area, Lhasa City, the scenery is good.
Have time to come here to visit and experience Lhasa
The Lhasa River originates from the south of the Nianqing Tanggura Mountains - Jiali Li Pengcuola Kongmagou. The north and northeast are adjacent to the Nu River basin, the east is connected to the Palonzangbu and Niyang rivers, the south is the main current of the Yarlung Zangbu River, and the west and northwest are the inner flowing water systems of northern Tibet.