place

Hteinbin Cemetery

Buildings and structures in YangonCemeteries in MyanmarCemetery stubsMyanmar geography stubs

Hteinbin Cemetery (Burmese: ထိန်ပင်သုသာန်; also spelt Htein Pin Cemetery), located in Hlaingthaya Township, is one of Yangon's largest cemeteries. The cemetery is maintained by the Yangon City Development Committee's environmental maintenance department. Hteinbin Cemetery consists of various ethnic and religious cemeteries, including those of the Karen, Burmese Muslims, former Shan saophas, Christians, Hindus and Sino-Burmese.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hteinbin Cemetery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Hteinbin Cemetery
Phyar Pon Road, Yangon

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Hteinbin CemeteryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 16.883072 ° E 96.02413 °
placeShow on map

Address

ဖျာပုံလမ်း

Phyar Pon Road
11401 Yangon
Yangon, Myanmar
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Bayinnaung Market

Bayinnaung Market (Burmese: ဘုရင့်နောင်ဈေး; also Bayintnaung Market), located in northwestern Yangon, is the largest agricultural commodities trading market in Myanmar. Established in 1990, the market complex consists of two-story shop houses with floor areas of 1,200 and 2,400 square feet (110 and 220 m2). It is the only legally permitted wholesale center of beans and pulses in the country, which exported 1.34 million tonnes of beans and pulses in 2007 for a total value of US$750 million.Matpe is the most common bean and pulse export at the market.In August 2009, about 4000 tonnes of matpe, green mung, pigeon peas and chickpeas were traded daily. The market is the main wholesale center of dried fish and prawns for mainly domestic markets. The market is at the center of the planned Internet-based commodities information network that will link all of the country's wholesale commodity exchange centers, to achieve consistent pricing and operations in line with international market prices.Myanmar's wholesale commodity exchanges are currently only connected by telephone. As of October 2008, only Banyinnaung has the system, which displays local prices for beans and pulses in real time. Domestic and international prices for edible oil crops, onions, garlic, potatoes, chili are expected to be added soon. Since August 2009, the Myanmar Pulses, Beans and Sesame Seed Merchants’ Association requires that all domestic and international transactions be concluded here at Bayinnaung Market.