Palace Museum to offer discounted tickets from mid-September
Updated: 2014-08-28 13:25
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
||||||||
|
Visitors at the Palace Museum in Beijing, Aug 27, 2014. |
To handle the overwhelming crowds, the Palace Museum in Beijing will control the sale of tickets through three pilot programs beginning in mid-September. These include discounted tickets after 2 pm from Sept 12-14, annual tickets and free tickets for certain groups of people.
Considering "rush hour" at the Palace Museum is from 10 am - 1 pm, the museum will try out new pricing: 30 yuan ($4.88) after 2 pm from Sept 12-14. The ticket will not cover entry to specialized exhibitions, however.
"We would like to encourage visitors to avoid the peak time in the morning and switch to the afternoon, so they can have a more comfortable touring experience," said museum Director Shan Jixiang not long ago.
The 300 yuan annual tickets allow visitors to enter the museum 10 times a calendar year. Special exhibition halls are not included. Chinese students and seniors are eligible for half-price discounts.
The museum will offer free admission for teachers on Nov 5; medical practitioners on Dec 3; volunteer workers on Jan 7; soldiers on Feb 4; policemen on Mar 4 and college students on Apr 1.
- Star Stefanie Sun holds concert in Beijing
- Faye Wong's manager refutes star's drug rumors
- Lu Yi and daughter Bei Er pose for street snaps
- Photoshoots of actress Li Xiaomeng
- Council of Fashion Designers of America Awards
- Fan Bingbing, first Chinese actress in Barbie Hall of Fame
- Awarding ceremony of 2014 hito Pop Music held in Taipei
- Zhao Liying's photo shoot for Children's Day
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Nanjing 2014 Youth Olympic Games |
Leading leaden lives |
Former security chief under probe |
China helps fight international war on drugs |
Crackdown on terrorist attacks |
My China Story: Meeting the master |
Today's Top News
US, China to parley on extradition of criminals
US rice could see potential market in China
China accuses US over 'close-in reconnaissance'
EB-5 visa ceiling is short-term, expert says
China and US in talks on code of conduct
Chicken market gets a boost
Microsoft 'not fully open with sales data'
Lawmakers in move to tackle espionage threat
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |