Nalaikh
| Nalaikh District Налайх дүүрэг ᠨᠠᠯᠠᠶᠢᠬᠤᠲᠡᠭᠦᠷᠭᠡ | |
|---|---|
| .svg.png) Flag .svg.png) Coat of arms | |
| Coordinates: 47°46′21″N 107°15′13″E / 47.77250°N 107.25361°E | |
| Country | Mongolia | 
| Municipality | Ulaanbaatar | 
| Settlement founded | 1922[1] | 
| City status | 1962 | 
| Reorganized as district | 1992 | 
| Government | |
| • Body | Citizens' Representatives Khural of the Ulaanbaatar city | 
| • Governor of District | D.Nayanbayar | 
| Area | |
|  • Total | 687.6 km2 (265.5 sq mi) | 
| Elevation | 1,459 m (4,787 ft) | 
| Population  (2022) | |
|  • Total | 39,579 | 
| Time zone | UTC+8 (UTC + 8) | 
| Area code | +976 (0) 23 | 
| Vehicle registration | НА_ (_ variable) | 
| Website | Official website | 
Nalaikh (Mongolian: Налайх [naɮɛ́χ]) is one of nine districts of Ulaanbaatar. It has an area of 68,700 hectares and a population of 39,579 in 2022[2] (26,529 in 2005). A former coal-mining town, it is subdivided into 8 subdistricts, incorporating Shokhoi, Arjanchivlan, the Terelj holiday center, and other residential areas, as well as a former Soviet military cantonment, including an airfield.[3]
Nalaikh is linked to Ulaanbaatar by a 43-kilometer narrow-gauge railway line, built in July 1938. The line had three stations (Nalaikh; Amgalan, a Ulaanbaatar suburb; and Kombinat, the city's industrial combine) and operated 14 steam locomotives, 16 passenger carriages, 70 goods wagons, 10 platform wagons, and nine fuel tank wagons. Nalaikh now has a broad-gauge branch line (via Khonkhor) to the Trans-Mongolian Railway. The Kapitalnaya shaft went into operation in 1951, and at full capacity produced 600,000 metric tons of coal a year. Nalaikh gained town status in 1962, and was established as a district of Ulaanbaatar in 1992. Since the closure of the coal mine in the 1990s, the district has had a high rate of unemployment.[3]
Tourist attractions
Notable people
- Kyokutenho Masaru – sumo wrestler
- Puntsagiin Sükhbat

References
- ^ "HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF NALAIH DISTRICT". Official website of Nalaikh district (in Mongolian). Retrieved 2024-05-13.
- ^ "Статистик үзүүлэлт".
- ^ a b Sanders, Alan J. K. (2010). Historical Dictionary of Mongolia. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810861916.
