| |
| |
Essential
Architecture- Peking
The Summer Palace (World Heritage Site) |
|
architect
|
|
|
location
|
The Summer Palace is easily accessible
from most parts of Beijing. Head north at Suzhou Bridge on the north-western
3rd Ring Road, north at Sihai Bridge on the north-western 4th Ring Road, or
south at the northern 5th Ring Road at the Zhongguancun/Beiqing Road exit.
Public transportation also reaches the Summer Palace.
|
|
date
|
1750 (Reign Year 15 of Emperor Qianlong)
Qing Dynasty |
|
style
|
various |
|
construction
|
stone, wood |
|
type
|
Palace |
|
|
 |
|
|
  |
|
|
Bronze Qilin statue inside the Summer Palace. |
|
|
  |
|
|
Long Corridor |
|
|
 |
|
|
View over Kunming Lake towards Yu Quan Hill with Yu Feng Pagoda.
|
|
|
 |
|
|
The famous Marble Boat on the grounds of the Summer Palace. |
|
|
 |
|
|
Hall of Benevolence and Longevity |
|
|
  |
|
|
Standing atop the Longevity Hill, the Tower of Buddhist Incense is the
highest building in the Summer Palace. |
|
|
 |
|
|
Kunming Lake with the Seventeen-Arch
Bridge. |
|
|
  |
|
|
|
The Summer Palace or Yiheyuan (literally "Garden of Nurtured Harmony") is
a palace in Beijing, China. The Summer Palace is mainly dominated by
Longevity Hill (60 meters high) and the Kunming Lake. It covers an
expanse of 2.9 square kilometers, three quarters of which is water. In
its compact 70,000 square metres of building space, one finds a variety
of palaces, gardens, and other classical-style architectural structures.
The Summer Palace started out life as the Garden of Clear Ripples
(pinyin: Qingyi Yuán) in 1750 (Reign Year 15 of Emperor Qianlong).
Artisans reproduced the garden architecture styles of various palaces in
China. Kunming Lake was created by extending an existing body of water
to imitate the West Lake in Hangzhou. The palace complex suffered two
major attacks--during the Anglo-French allied invasion of 1860 (with the
Old Summer Palace also ransacked at the same time), and during the Boxer
Rebellion, in an attack by the eight allied powers in 1900. The garden
survived and was rebuilt in 1886 and 1902. In 1888, it was given the
current name, Yihe Yuan. It served as a summer resort for Empress
Dowager Cixi, who diverted 30 million taels of silver, said to be
originally designated for the Chinese navy (Beiyang Fleet), into the
reconstruction and enlargement of the Summer Palace.
In December 1998, UNESCO included the Summer Palace on its World
Heritage List. It declared the Summer Palace an "outstanding expression
of the creative art of Chinese landscape garden design, incorporating
the works of humankind and nature in a harmonious whole."
Layout
Entering from the northern gate, the visitor first comes
across Suzhou Street, designed to replicate the scenery of south-eastern
China. At the top of Longevity Hill stands Duobao Glazed Pagoda. From
the top of the hill one can see Kunming Lake to the south and southwest.
The Marble Boat is at the southwest foot of the hill, and the Long
Corridor runs east to west along its southern edge. Most of the other
notable buildings (17-Arch Bridge; pinyin: Shíqi Kong Qiáo) run along
the eastern edge of the lake, directly south of the eastern end of the
Long Corridor. Other features of the Summer Palace include the
Cloud-Dispelling Hall, the Tower of Buddhist Incense and Jade Belt
Bridge.
|
|
links
|
|
|
www.essential-architecture.com
|
|