Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - What are the architectural differences between Chongqing Huguang Guild Hall and Beijing Huguang Guild Hall?

What are the architectural differences between Chongqing Huguang Guild Hall and Beijing Huguang Guild Hall?

Chongqing Huguang Guild Hall is different from Beijing Huguang Guild Hall, with spacious architectural space and magnificent momentum, but more inherited the structural characteristics of Huizhou architecture. In landscape design, Jiangnan gardens are often used. Tall stacked walls repeatedly appear between the courtyards of Gul Hall, dividing the space into several courtyards, each of which is connected by a small door, and the space is endless.

This makes each courtyard have its own unique functions and corresponding scenery. Rockery flowers and plants, small bridges and flowing water, and carved flowers around the cloister are all unique features. The complete space contains uniqueness, which is the combination of Jiangnan garden features and Huizhou architectural structure features.

At the same time, we can also see the regional architectural features of Chongqing. The whole hall is built on the mountain, with different heights, staggered steps and twists and turns, and each courtyard has a patio balcony. These are the characteristics that the traditional Huizhou architectural structure does not have. The architectural features of Huguang Guild Hall in Chongqing are really unique.

Huguang Sichuan Immigration Museum, built in 2005, is the first immigration museum in China. It is divided into two parts: the main hall and the auxiliary hall, with a construction area of about 3000 square meters. It was renovated and upgraded in 20 17. The museum uses modern multimedia technology, through the combination of sound and photoelectric technology.

Restore the scenes of people from Jiangxi, Shaanxi, Guangdong, Fujian, Zhejiang, Guizhou, Yunnan and other provinces entering Sichuan by water or land, and reproduce the ups and downs of immigrants entering Sichuan by boat, going up the Yangtze River and crossing the Three Gorges on the big screen; Immigrants who entered Sichuan by land took dry food, iron pots, salt and other "three treasures" in wheelbarrows, camped in the wind and climbed the plank road, which made people feel the hardships and dangers of immigration into Sichuan.