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The cash machine is one of 19 where the Bank of Ras al Khaimah (RAKBank) has added a Chinese interface in addition to the English and Arabic options that are standard across the region.
It is the latest move by a UAE business to appeal to customers from the East.
"It is a very fast-growing segment of our business banking base," said Pritam Mirchandani, the business finance head at the bank.
"Look at India and China. There are obviously a lot more Indians in this country than there are Chinese. But the Chinese are growing at a very rapid pace."
Sectors including banking and tourism are tailoring services for a growing population of Chinese visitors, deep-pocketed businessmen and blue-collar workers who move here to build critical infrastructure projects.
This year the number of Chinese visitors to Dubai is expected to increase by more than half.
Mohammed al Sheikh, the Dubai Department of Tourism and Commerce Marketing's head of region for Australia and Asia, said about 152,000 Chinese hotel guests stayed in Dubai last year, while the figure for this year was expected to be at least 50 per cent greater.
In the past two years Chinese companies won US$4.8 billion (Dh17.63bn) in construction contracts, including Abu Dhabi's massive crude oil pipeline to Fujairah.
China recently became the UAE's second-largest trading partner, with transactions between the two countries - heavily weighted towards Chinese imports - totalling $119.4bn from 1999 to 2009.
Mr Mirchandani began to notice an increase in the number of Chinese customers five years ago.
"These customers wanted the relationship managers, the staff, to be speaking the same language as them," he said.
The bank recruited four employees from China and trained them in financial services so they could work with customers looking to invest in the region. They were the first of a team of 15 Mandarin speakers who now serve some of the bank's most prized clients.
"Dubai is the trading hub for the region," said Mr Mirchandani. "It's where a lot of businessmen come to make their purchases."
The bank also created a special type of loan, in part to serve Chinese customers running small-to-medium size businesses wanting to take out loans.