List of Chinatowns

List of Chinatowns

This is a list of Chinatowns (urban regions containing a large population of Chinese people within a non-Chinese society) in select countries. It includes the parent city with metropolitan older Chinatown and newer satellite "Chinatowns" in the suburban communities. It includes some Chinatowns in rural towns.

Key:
* Old, original main Chinatown in the anchor city - street or location
** Newer areas in other parts of major cities or suburbs where Chinese people tend to shop for Chinese goods and services

General criteria for Chinatowns"(A Chinatown should share many of these characteristics. More modern and newer Chinese commercial areas may be nebulous.)":
* A currently or historically Chinese-speaking community outside of Mainland China PRC, Taiwan ROC, Hong Kong SAR, and Macao SAR and maintain relative ties to these regions.
* Older Chinatowns, officially recognized as Chinatown by local governments, historical societies, and so on.
* In older Chinatowns, Chinese-style arches serving as entrance markers.
* Center of community trade. A self-sustaining and concentrated community with goods and services and serving as a major cultural and commercial hub for foreign-born and native-born overseas Chinese.
* Chinese-language newspaper presses.
* A dense concentration of competitive immigrant-owned shops offering imported authentic Chinese and general Asian goods (for example, ginseng and herbs, Video CDs) not found in the larger society and geared towards ethnic Chinese population.
* Family and regional associations and community organizations
* Observation of Chinese New Year or Lunar New Year, with traditional Chinese dragon and lion dances
* In Western countries, populated by ethnic Chinese immigrants, principally from Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Vietnam and from various countries.

Argentina

* Buenos Aires (See Belgrano Chinatown)

Australia

New South Wales

Generally, Most of Sydney had been populated with Hong Kong Chinese, now there is a huge growth of Mainland Chinese and Mandarin Speakers, due to Australias Proximity to China.

* Cowra
* Sydney (See Chinatown, Sydney)
** Ashfield (also known as Little Shanghai) - Liverpool Road (mostly Mainland Chinese; Shanghainese. It also has the largest proportion of Mandarin Speaking Chinese in Sydney.)
** Auburn - (Mainland Chinese; mostly Cantonese)
** Burwood - Burwood Road (Mainland Chinese)
** Cabramatta - (Vietnamese Chinese)
** Campsie - (Hong Kong and Mainland Chinese)
** Chatswood - Victoria Avenue (Hong Kong Chinese)
** Eastwood - Rowe Street (Mainland Chinese; Eastwood has one of the most diverse Chinese diaspora in Sydney)
** Fairfield - (Vietnamese Chinese)
** Hurstville - (Mainland Chinese; huge proportion of Mandarin speaking Chinese)
** Parramatta - Church Street (Hong Kong and Mainlander Chinese)
* [http://www.chia.chinesemuseum.com.au/biogs/CH01118b.htm Tambaroora] - historic

Northern Territory

* [http://www.chia.chinesemuseum.com.au/biogs/CH01112b.htm Brocks Creek ]
* Darwin - defunct, was on Cavenagh Street. A new modern Chinatown to be built in Darwin CBD.
* Pine Creek - historic goldfield Chinatown

Queensland

* Atherton - historic, the Hou Waing Temple is preserved
* Brisbane (see Chinatown, Brisbane)
** Sunnybank - Mains Road
* Cooktown - historical Chinatown, was dubbed "Little Canton" during the 1800s

South Australia

* Adelaide (see Chinatown, Adelaide)

Victoria

* Melbourne (see Chinatown, Melbourne)
** Box Hill - Carrington Road (predominantly Taiwanese community)
** Doncaster - Hong Kong and Taiwanese community
** Footscray - Nicholson Street (predominantly Vietnamese Chinese)
** Richmond - Victoria Street
** Springvale - Springvale Road
** St. Albans - St. Albans Road, Alfreida Street & Main Road East

Western Australia

* Broome
* Perth (see Chinatown, Perth)

Belgium

* Antwerp - Van Wesenbekestraat
* Brussels - rue Saint Géry

Canada

Alberta

* Calgary - Downtown East Village (Chinatown, Calgary)
** Centre Street N, south of 16th Avenue N, and East of Centre Street north at 2nd and 3rd avenues. Originally a handful of Chinese businesses, now an ethnic theme park-cum-mall
* Edmonton - 95th Street between 102nd and Jasper Avenues; old Chinatown was located at 97th Street, between 105th and 108th Avenues and moved following re-development of the Edmonton LRT line

* Lethbridge - 3rd Street and 2nd Avenue (Chinatown, Lethbridge)

British Columbia

*Nanaimo - Machleary Street, Pine Street (remnants burned to ground in 1960s)
* Victoria - Fisgard Street, Oldest in Canada
*Greater Vancouver
** New Westminster's Chinatown - 8th & Columbia, destroyed in the city's Great Fire, 1898, and not rebuilt or resettled.
** [http://www.explorasian.org/2006/07/new-westminster-museum-and-archives.html New Westminster Museum and Archives Chinatown Project]
** Burnaby - Kingsway Avenue, anchored by Crystal Mall. Usually referred to as Metrotown after the largest mall in the area. Not a historical Chinatown.
** Richmond - No. 3 Road, a collection of modern Hong Kong immigrant-oriented shopping centres built in the 1980s and 1990s (Golden Village). Not a historical Chinatown.
*** Steveston - Part of the City of Richmond, once located around Moncton and Bayview Streets, burned down in the 1918 Steveston fire. Steveston is usually considered historically as a Japanese enclave, and was never referred to as Chinatown for that reason despite a Chinese presence.
** Vancouver - Historic Chinatown on Pender Street and Main Street (Chinatown, Vancouver)

*Historical Chinatowns elsewhere in BC.
** [http://www.cayoosh.net/chinatown.html Lillooet's Chinatown] - the BC Interior's first Chinatown
** [http://collections.ic.gc.ca/generations/community/barkerville.html Barkerville's Chinatown] - although ostensibly about Barkerville "per se", content here is all Chinese-related.
** [http://www.barkerville.com/mapbv.htm Map of Barkerville, explaining location and circumstances of Chinatown]
** [http://collections.ic.gc.ca/yale/tour/china.htm Yale's Chinatown] - the first Chinatown on the BC Mainland
** [http://collections.ic.gc.ca/yale/tour/onlee.htm Yale's On Lee House] - a surviving structure of Yale's Chinatown
** Cumberland's Chinatown - once the second-largest on the West Coast of North America (c.1910), founded as a protected camp for Chinese strike-breakers by the Dunsmuir coal empire.
** Wellington's Chinatown - Dunsmuir's first mines in the town of Wellington employed 100s of Chinese workers in the 1870s-1890s. The old China town was located at Jingle Pot road and Old Slope road in the Wellington neighbourhood of Nanaimo, and has reverted to forest with numurous pot-holes where treasure seekers have excavated for Chinese artifacts.

** [http://collections.ic.gc.ca/kingcoal/10/bigstrike/chinese.html Cumberland's Chinese Strikebreakers, from Digital Collections "King Coal" series]
** [http://www.cumberlandforest.com/photos/Chinatown.gifPicture of Cumberland's Chinatown, 1910]
** [http://www.kag.bc.ca/Exhibitions/AllAboard/canp140.html Chinatown at Keefer's, Fraser Canyon CPR Construction 1880s]

Manitoba

* Chinatown, Winnipeg - King Street between James and Higgins Avenues

Ontario

* Ottawa - Somerset Street
* Toronto – Spadina Avenue, between College Street and Queen Street (see Chinatown, Toronto)
** Agincourt – several commercial plazas along main thoroughfares
** Riverdale – Gerrard Street and Broadview Avenue, known as "East Chinatown"
* Markham – Steeles Avenue between Esna Park Drive and McCowan Road, centred on Market Village Mall, Pacific Mall and Splendid China Tower; clusters along Highway 7
* Mississauga – Dundas Street and Tomken Road
* Richmond Hill – along Highway 7
* Windsor - Wyandotte Street West

Quebec

* Montreal main|Chinatown, Montreal - Boulevard Saint-Laurent between Viger and René-Lévesque, and La Gauchetière between Saint-Dominique and the Palais des Congrès
** Brossard - boulevard Taschereau

Saskatchewan

* Saskatoon - originally on 19th Street and re-located to Idylwyld Drive
* Regina

Cuba

* Havana, Cuba - "Barrio Chino", includes many Chinese restaurants and Cuban-Chinese friendship societies

France

* Paris - see 13th arrondissement
** Belleville - rue Rebelvalle

Greece

* Thessaloniki
* Athens

Hungary

* Budapest - (Source: http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Cafe/1718/jjchinatown.html)

India

* Kolkata (Calcutta)

Ireland

* Dublin (Source: http://worldwide.chinatownonline.org/europe/)

Israel

* Tel Aviv Fact|date=October 2007

Indonesia

* Jakarta - Jalan Gajah Mada
* Medan
* Semarang
* Singkawang
* Pontianak
* Surabaya - Jalan Kembang Jepun

Italy

* Milan (Source: http://www.chinatownitalia.it/inglese/home.php)
* Florence, Italy (Source: http://www.chinatownitalia.it/inglese/citta.php?citta=Florence)
* Bologna, Italy (Source: http://www.chinatownitalia.it/inglese/citta.php?citta=Bologna)

Japan

* Yokohama (See Yokohama Chinatown)
* Kobe (See Kobe Chinatown)
* Nagasaki

Malaysia

* Kuala Lumpur - Jalan Petaling / Petaling Street (see Chinatown, Kuala Lumpur)
* George Town,Penang-A old town full with oversea's Chinese.

Mexico

* Mexicali
* Mexico City

Myanmar (Burma)

* Yangon (Rangoon)

Nauru

* Aiwo

The Netherlands

* Amsterdam
* Rotterdam
* The Hague

New Zealand

* Auckland Mt Albert, Northcote, Upper Queen Street
* Wellington

Panama

* Panama City

Peru

* Lima

Philippines

* Manila - Ongpin Street, see Binondo
** Manila Bay - Neo Chinatown
* Davao City - Uyanguren Street, includes a night market patterrned after those in Hong Kong

Portugal

*Varziela Chinatown in Vila do Conde - Portuguese Chinatown. [ [http://www.correiomanha.pt/noticia.asp?id=166014&p=22&idselect=19&idCanal=19 Correio da Manhã ] ]
*Entroncamento City of Chinese

Romania

*Bucharest(Dorobiesti)

Russia

* St. Petersburg
* Ussuriysk
* Yekaterinburg

Serbia

* Belgrade

Singapore

* Singapore (see Chinatown, Singapore)

outh Africa

* Johannesburg
** Derrick Street, Cyrildene and also in and around Bruma. There are approximately 30 restaurants offering food from various areas in China and Taiwan. There are also lots of shops/supermarkets and street vendors selling fresh vegetables, seafood and street food.
** Commissioner Street, CBD. This was Johannesburg's original Chinatown until it moved to Cyrildene in the 1990s. There are a few restaurants and a supermarket still here.

* Bronkhorstspruit, east of Pretoria
** An expanding Chinese settlement is situated here.

Thailand

* Bangkok (See Yaowarat Road)
* Santikhiri
* Phuket

United Arab Emirates

* Dubai

United Kingdom

England

* Birmingham (See Chinatown, Birmingham)
* Liverpool
* London (See Chinatown, London)
**Colindale - Oriental City complex
**Croydon - China Town Mall
* Manchester (See Chinatown, Manchester)
* Newcastle upon Tyne
* Sheffield

Northern Ireland

*Belfast - Donegall Pass

cotland

*Edinburgh
*Glasgow

United States

California

California is home to many chinese people, especially in the Los Angeles and San Francisco area. Los Angeles has more Mandarin speaking people due to immigration from Taiwan and continued immigration from the Mainland. San Francisco Bay Area is generally home to many Hong Kong Chinese, although there is still a growing prescence of Mandarin speakers.

* Bakersfield - Historical Chinatown located on 19th, 20th, and 21st Streets, and on L and M Streets. (Source: http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/5views/5views4h7.htm)
* Chico - existed around 1865 in the area of Flume Street between East Fifth and East Sixth, several blocks over and had a population of more than 500 Chinese. (Source: http://www.newsreview.com/chico/Content?oid=6795)
*Chinese Camp - Highway 49, old gold mining town of early Chinese residents and shops near Yosemite National Park
* Eureka - destroyed in 1886
* Fresno - defunct, but there are efforts to revitalize it (Source: http://www.fresno-chinatown.org/index.html)
* Hanford - China Alley, between Green Street and White Street (Chinese buildings still standing, but not particularly culturally active)
* Los Angeles - Broadway Avenue, Spring Street. (See Chinatown, Los Angeles.)
** Alhambra - mixture of Chinese plazas and storefronts along Valley Boulevard from Fremont Avenue to New Avenue
** Arcadia - strip malls along Baldwin Avenue, supermarkets on Duarte Avenue
** Artesia - Pioneer Boulevard nearby the "Little India" community
** Diamond Bar - some Chinese businesses on Grand Ave. (Taiwanese-Chinese, Mandarin Speaking)
** Hacienda Heights - Azusa Avenue and in neighboring City of Industry on Colima Road; Taiwanese Chinese
** Irvine - small handful of strip malls on Culver Drive geared towards Taiwanese
** Monterey Park - combination of Chinese older storefronts and later strip malls (strong cluster of Chinese supermarkets, restaurants, stores, and professional offices) are found along the main business routes of Atlantic Boulevard, Garfield Avenue, Garvey Avenue; formerly Taiwanese Chinese, now Hong Kong and Mainlander Chinese.
** Rosemead - generally scattered Chinese retail along Garvey Avenue (arguably an extension of Chinese businesses in Monterey Park) and on Valley Blvd (possible extension of San Gabreil)
** Rowland Heights - concentration on Colima Road and another cluster eastward around Nogales Avenue; Taiwanese Chinese
** San Gabriel - Valley Boulevard (from New Avenue to Delta Ave), mostly focused on San Gabriel Square anchored by 99 Ranch Market; Mainlander Chinese.
** San Marino - Huntington Dr; Taiwanese Chinese.
** Temple City - Las Tunas Drive; Taiwanese Chinese.
** Walnut - Chinese businesses on Grand Ave and Amar Rd; Taiwanese Chinese
**West Covina - Hong Kong Plaza (with Hong Kong Supermarket) filled with a variety of Asian retail and eateries on Glendora Ave.
* Marysville
* Nevada City - defunct, but a cemetery remains
** Truckee - defunct, only one building remains (Source: http://www.sierrasun.com/article/20041128/LIFE/111280007)
* Oakland - Broadway, 7th Street, Harrison Avenue, 10th Street (See Chinatown, Oakland.)
** Fremont - Little Taipei Plaza on Warm Springs Boulevard
** San Antonio District - International Blvd, newer retail concentration pioneered by ethnic Chinese from Southeast Asia
* Riverside - Brockton and Tequesquite (historic site - National Register of Historic Places)
* Sacramento - 3rd, 5th, J, and I Streets
** South Sacramento - Strip malls going up on Stockton Blvd with a range of newer combined Chinese and Vietnamese retail
**Fiddleton - historic mining community which populated up to 5000 Chinese. The Chinese medicine store Chew Kee Store operates as a museum
** Isleton - includes the preserved historic Bing Kung Tong Building
** Locke - rural town including Locke Historic District - National Register of Historic Places
** Walnut Grove
* Salinas - defunct, soledad Street, Bing Kong Tong Chinese Free Masons building remains but the area is nowaadays a decrepit skid row
* San Diego - historic Market and K Streets, 2nd and 5th Avenues near the Gas Lamp Quartet, re-themed as the Asian Pacific Historic Thematic District
** Clairemont Mesa - small combined Chinese and Korean concentration on Convoy Street with 99 Ranch Market
* San Francisco - Jackson Street, Stockton Avenue. (See Chinatown, San Francisco.); Hong Kong Chinese.
** Richmond District
** Sunset District
* San Jose - defunct "Chinatown" on Market Street (Source: http://marketstreet.stanford.edu/), though a historical sign exists near the Fairmont Hotel that says the Chinatown was burned down by arson back around the 1960s.
** Cupertino - North Wolfe Road, Cupertino Village anchor by 99 Ranch Market; Taiwanese Chinese.
** Milpitas - Barber Lane; Taiwan, Mainlander and Hong Kong Chinese.
**Mountain View - Castro Street in downtown, with a collection of stores, eateries, grocers, bakers for the Hong Kong immigrant community
*San Luis Obispo - Palm Street, only the historique Ah Louis Store remains as a museum
* Santa Ana
** Garden Grove
** Westminster - Not a "Chinatown" per se, but Bolsa Avenue's official “Little Saigon” also has many "Chinese" businesses and residents of Vietnamese-born Chinese immigrants. Ironically, although a "Vietnamese" community, this is the only location in Southern California outside Chinatown where a Chinese paifang leads to a shopping plaza.
*Stockton - Washington Street and Chung Wah Lane, vastly diminished since the 1960s but several Chinese facilities are still fairly active on two blocks (including a Chinese restaurant in operation since the 1890s)
* Ventura
** Oxnard
* Weaverville - a gold mining-era town that had a Chinatown but burned down in 1906. The remaining Taoist joss house is on the National Register of Historic Places

Colorado

* Denver - old Chinatown in Hop Alley.

District of Columbia

* Washington, D.C. - H Street

Florida

* Miami - NE 167th Street and 163rd Street, between NE 6th Avenue and NE 19th Avenue
* Tampa - Waters and Armenia Avenues

Georgia

* Chamblee, Doraville & Duluth (all suburbs of Atlanta)- mixed Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese areas on Buford Highway (There is no "Chinatown" in the city of Atlanta)

Hawaii

*Honolulu, [http://www.chinatownhi.com/ Honolulu] - Beretannia Street, Mounakea Street

Idaho

*Boise - founded in 1901 and lasted until 1970s, formerly on 8th Street and Front Street

Illinois

* Chicago - Along Wentworth at Cermak. [http://www.chicagochinatown.org/] (See Chinatown, Chicago.)
**New Chinatown, Chicago

Maryland

* Baltimore - Park Avenue

Massachusetts

* Boston - Kneeland Street Chinatown (Boston)
** Quincy, Massachusetts - alternative to original Chinatown on Hancock Street

Michigan

* Detroit - First Chinatown became extinct since the 1950s due to the construction of the John Lodge Freeway. Relocated Chinatown on Cass and Petersboro Avenue in the 1960s, but is now mostly abandoned with some Chinese facilities still remaining
* Madison Heights - new "Chinatown" in the Detroit area within strip malls on John R. Road.

In addition, there is a larger Chinatown in nearby Windsor, Ontario, Canada across the Detroit/Windsor Bridge on Wyandotte Street West between the University of Windsor and Downtown.

Missouri

* St. Louis - original Chinatown destroyed in early 1960s; second relocated Chinatown defunct since late 1970s
* University City - third new St. Louis area "Chinatown" on Olive Boulevard

Montana

* Butte - has a defunct one (Source: http://www.maiwah.org/)

Nebraska

* Omaha, Nebraska - defunct, vicinity of 12th and Douglas Streets with the On Leong Tong based at 111 North 12th. King Fong's Cantonese at 315 South 16th Street was opened in 1921 by Gin Ah Chin with elaborate furnishings imported from Hong Kong. (Source: E Pluribus Omaha: Immigrants All by Harry Otis and Donald Erickson, 2000)

Nevada

* Las Vegas - fairly incontigous collection of Asian commercial plazas along Spring Mountain Road, most distinctive is Chinatown Plaza (See Chinatown, Las Vegas.)

New Jersey

* Edison
* Chinatown, Newark a small Chinatown that grew to its largest in the 1920s and no longer exists today
* Pleasantville - new one started on Black Horse Pike, near Atlantic City

New York

* New York City - Canal Street, see Chinatown, Manhattan
** Sunset Park, Brooklyn - 8th Avenue
** Homecrest, Brooklyn - Avenue U
** Elmhurst, Queens
** Flushing, Queens - Roosevelt Avenue

There is also a Chinatown in nearby Edison, New Jersey

North Carolina

* Charlotte - Central Avenue (near Briar Creek Rd.) is the original "Chinatown" consisting of "Saigon Square" and a pair of other Chinese shopping plazas that include "Dim Sum Restaurant" (which serves New York styled dim sum), the "Eang Hong Supermarket", "Van Loi" (which serves cha shao), and a dozen or so other stores.
** Saigon Square has various Vietnamese (albeit not Chinese) stores including Pho Hoa (Vietnamese noodles).
** Asian Corner Mall on North Tryon Street and Sugar Creek Road, developed from the defunct Tryon Mall in 1999, with "Dragon Court Restaurant", "Hong Kong BBQ", "International Supermarket", and "New Century Market" and several other Chinese/Vietnamese stores.

Ohio

* Cleveland - around Payne Avenue and E. 30th Street
* Cincinnati - defunct (Source: http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2001/12/06/loc_sept_11_evokes.html)

Oklahoma

* Oklahoma City - roughly along N. Classen Blvd from N. 22nd Street to N. West 36th (See Asia District)
** Satellite developments (mostly strip malls) in North West and South West city quadrants
** Old Chinatown, Downtown - In the first half of the 20th century, hundreds of Chinese immigrants lived in an historic "underground Chinatown" beneath what is now the Cox Convention Center. The chambers were rediscovered, long-abandoned, in 1969. [http://www.newsok.com/article/3069770/]

Oregon

* Portland (See Chinatown, Portland)
** Montavilla - 82nd Avenue
* Jacksonville - has a defunct Chinatown (oldest in Oregon)
* John Day

Pennsylvania

* Philadelphia - Cherry Street area (See Chinatown, Philadelphia)
** Northeast Philadelphia - Adams Avenue and Roosevelt Blvd. (Hong Kong Supermarket area)
** South Philadelphia - Washington Avenue and 10th Street (big Chinese/Vietnamese shopping center near Little Italy)
* Pittsburgh -
** Defunct old Chinatown around Blvd of the Allies and Grant Street (two Chinese restaurants still exist from the original Chinatown)
*** The original tenants in the old original Pittsburgh Chinatown included, all of which are gone today:
**** Wing Hong Chinese Co., 519 Second Ave.
**** Hop Ching Wing, at 527 Second Ave
**** Quong Yuen Lee Co., 505 Second Ave
**** Quong Chong Shing, 511 Second Ave.
**** Sun Wing Sing Co, 507 Second Ave.
**** Quong Wah Hai Co., 314 Second Ave.
**** Lee Jan Fueng, 521 Second Ave.
**** (Source: http://www.pittsburghpostgazette.com/lifestyle/20031209chinatown1209p1.asp)

** Most new Chinese stores are in Pittsburgh's "Strip District" on Penn Avenue and 18th Street
* Harrisburg - Cameron Street

South Dakota

* Deadwood - defunct (Source: http://www.sdsmt.edu/wwwsarc/projects/deadwood/index.html)

Tennessee

* Memphis - Summer Avenue (east) near I-240

Texas

* Houston - Chartres Street in Downtown (See Chinatown, Houston)
**Bellaire (city of Houston) - Bellaire Boulevard and Beltway 8.
* Dallas - no actual Chinatown in existence, although there are isolated Chinese/Vietnamese/Asian strip malls throughout the suburbs: Arlington, Garland, Richardson, and Plano.
**Dallas - Hong Kong Supermarket at the corner of Walnut St. and Audelia Rd.
**Garland - Chinese/Vietnamese stores located the following areas: along Walnut Street, between Jupiter Rd. and Audelia Rd.(in Dallas); corner of Buckingham Rd. and Shiloh Rd.; corner of Jupiter Rd. and Beltline Rd.
**Plano - Coit Road and Park Road, Large Chinese Center at North Central Expressway(75) and Legacy Road.
**Richardson - Chinese restaurants and shops around Polk Street between North Central Expressway(75) and Greenville Ave.; Greenville Ave. at Terrance Drive.
**http://www.2002china.net/chinatowns/dallas/indexee.shtml
**Arlington - Hong Kong Supermarket on Pioneer, near Cooper Street/New York Street.
* Austin - prefabricated Chinatown Center on Lamar Boulevard, billed as Austin's "Chinatown" (new as of 2006) (Source: http://www.chinatownaustin.com/)

Utah

* Salt Lake City, Utah - defunct one on Plum Valley

Virginia

* Alexandria, Virginia - A "satellite" of the Washington, DC Chinatown.

Washington

*Olympia - 5th Avenue and Water Street, defunct by the 1940s, this Chinatown was founded by the Lok family from Taishan in Guangdong, China. (Washington Governor Gary Locke is a descendant)
* Seattle (See International District, Seattle, Washington.)
** Kent -Chinese-themed indoor mall on East Valley Highway,
* Spokane - defunct by the 1940s, it was on Trent Alley in downtown Spokane but is now a parking lot today
*Tacoma - defunct, burned down in 1885 (see Lincoln International District.)

Vietnam

* Ho Chi Minh City (see Cholon)

ee also

* Chinatowns
* List of named ethnic enclaves in North American cities
* Europe Street, a street in China dedicated to the European culture

References

* [http://www.parischinatown.fr/ Paris Chinatown France]


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