In Mount Qingcheng, one of the birthplaces of Taoism in China that is known to boast the "the world’s most tranquil place", the mountains are surrounded by undulating peaks and lush forests, and the views on the front and back mountains are distinctly different. Together with Dujiangyan, it was inscribed on the "World Heritage List" in 2000.
View DetailsLocated beside the Huanhua Creek, it is the former residence of Du Fu (712–770), a realistic poet in the Tang Dynasty, who lived in Chengdu. Today it has been transformed into a museum that combines the pattern of a memorial shrine and the style of the poet's former residence, as well as a great place to enjoy the scenery of a classical Chinese garden.
View DetailsWuhou Shrine is the world's most influential museum of the Three Kingdoms relics and the only existing combined memorial temple for both the emperor and his ministers in China.
View DetailsThis irrigation project built for flood control and drought relief over 2,000 years ago, now stands as the world's oldest, only remaining, still in use, grand hydraulic project with no dam water diversion as the characteristic. It plays a great role in the irrigation of farmlands in Chengdu Plain. Serving as the key to the "Land of Abundance", it passes down the wisdom of our ancestors in the ancient Shu.
View DetailsBy March, 2023, up to 237 giant pandas have been settled in the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. It has the world's largest captive breeding population of giant pandas. In addition to giant pandas, animals such as red pandas, black swans, mandarin ducks, and peacocks also live and breed here.
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