Sinsing used to be called Tāi-káng-po͘ (Chinese: 大港埔) in early days where it was filled with endless wilderness before. During the Japanese rule of Taiwan, residents in the area used to make a living from farming and lived a simple life. Due to the nature of agriculture industry, people deployed water conservation methods in the area, thus irrigation system was spread all over the area. Fields became fertile and they grew rice, sweet potato, sugarcane or corn.
^ ab"雙語詞彙". 高雄市政府全球資訊網 Kaohsiung City Government (in Chinese (Taiwan) and English). 30 August 2016. Archived from the original on 15 September 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2020. 中文 英文 類別 提供單位 ... 新興區 Sinsing District [旅遊資訊(travel)] KCG
^"About Singsing". Sinsing District Office, Kaohsiung City. Retrieved 25 July 2019. Sinsing District used to be called Dagangpu.
^Huang Chia-lin; Jake Chung (4 June 2019). "Kaohsiung announces tours of Siaoyao estate". Taipei Times. Retrieved 25 July 2019. Planned as a testing ground for the development of tropical agriculture, the estate, which is behind the Sinsing District (新興) Office on Jintian Road, was a peculiar blend of townhouse and private residence, the department said.
^Hama Salih, Samal; Mirza Hassan, Mohammad; Shiau, Jim; Hossain, Zakaria (27 Mar 2018). "Numerical simulation of staged braced excavation in sand ~ O6 MRT station". International Journal of Geomate. 14 (43): 104–111. Retrieved 25 July 2019. The Orange Line is located in the Lingya and Sinsing districts in Kaohsiung city with three underground stations, O6, O7, and O8.