China Daily (Hong Kong)

Sparkling again

An architectu­ral jewel laid to waste more than 150 years ago is sparkling again thanks to modern technology and the dedication of researcher­s and others

- By YANG YANG yangyangs@chinadaily.com.cn

App helps restore charm of Old Summer Palace

Fifteen years ago, He Yan, an architectu­re student, was visiting the Old Summer Palace in Beijing with her academic supervisor, Guo Daiheng, of the School of Architectu­re at Tsinghua University.

Guo, 66, riding a bicycle through the park, pointed into the distance and told her 23-year-old protegee: “This is Jiuzhou Qingyan, and that is Tianran Tuhua, two palace complexes of the Old Summer Palace.”

Anyone who had overheard the professor may well have thought she was hallucinat­ing, for at that time the park was nothing but wasteland, and the buildings of which she spoke had been laid waste 142 years earlier.

However, Guo’s expertise in matters to do with the Old Summer Palace allowed her to effortless­ly draw on her mind’s eye to project exactly where the buildings had once stood.

The Emperor Kang Xi, the fourth emperor of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), started building the imperial park in 1709, and it was expanded by his two successors, Emperor Yong Zheng and Emperor Qian Long. With constant constructi­on over a century, the park eventually covered more than 3.33 square kilometers, the area of 600 soccer fields, and was home to more than 1,000 palaces and more than 100 viewing spots.

The Old Summer Palace, designed and supervised by emperors themselves and built by the most talented and skilled workers, artisans and artists in ancient China, was the pinnacle of achievemen­t in Chinese traditiona­l parks, Guo says.

The palace’s name is a little misleading, for emperors and their families did not just reside there during summer. In fact it was in the Old Summer Palace rather than the Forbidden City that emperors spent most of their time as they managed the country, met high-level officials and foreign ambassador­s and celebrated festivals.

In the middle of the Qing Dynasty, Jiuzhou Qingyan was the residence of emperors, empresses and concubines. Tianran Tuhua, literally meaning a natural painting, one of the 40 top beauty spots in the Old Summer Palace, was renowned for its bamboo.

Though Guo has long been renowned for her expertise, He was astonished at how the professor could envision in a field of weeds the splendid palaces that the allied army of Britain and France looted and burned down in 1860.

Now technology is making Guo’s feat look rather simple. Anyone visiting the Old Summer Palace can see the original look of buildings on the screen of an iPad that can be hired in the park. The iPad has an app installed that was developed by Beijing Re-Yuanmingyu­an Company Limited. He Yan is the director of Tsinghua Heritage Institute for Digitaliza­tion.

Earlier this year Guo announced at Tsinghua University that her team had completed the research and developmen­t of a prog

program called Digital Yuanmingyu­an. More than 80 people spent 15 years on improving protection of the cultural heritage of the Old Summer Palace, drawing on more than 10,000 archives, completing 4,000 design drawings of the architectu­re, and making 2,000 digital models of the buildings.

Guo has been doing research on the Old Summer Palace for many years. In 1960 she graduated from Tsinghua University. Before her lay a career building houses, but she was instead assigned to teach and study ancient architectu­re and gardens at Tsinghua University.

She then started visiting and revisiting the Old Summer Palace. Farmers nearby had converted sections of it into farmland. In the overgrown weeds and farmland Guo searched for the remnants of hills and water systems, bridges, artificial hills, stones, building foundation­s and stone carvings, which were scattered among houses, pig pens and woods and on the banks of rivers and lakes.

At the end of the 1980s Guo headed a team that was designing a tourist park based on the Old Summer Palace in Zhuhai, Guangdong province. She chose 18 of the 40 viewing places, which Emperor Qianlong’s artists had painted in great detail, and rebuilt them in the 580,000square-meter park.

It opened to the public during the Spring Festival of 1997, and on March 8 that year, about 80,000 people visited it. But Guo always felt that, the park could never be regarded as representi­ng the cultural essence of the Old Summer Palace.

She was a frequent visitor to the National Library, where she would leaf through its many archives dedicated to the Old Summer Palace, and found a gold mine of interestin­g material. In 2000 she proposed an archives project relating to the Old Summer Palace and planned to set up a database about the palace, starting with materials at the National Library.

Shortly before, the Beijing Municipal Administra­tion of Cultural Her-

School of Architectu­re professor at Tsinghua University itage had started digging an archaeolog­ical site on the wasteland where the Old Summer Palace once was and invited Guo to formulate a study plan.

Guo then often rode a bicycle as she led students, among them He Yan, around the Old Summer Place searching for sites among the ubiquitous weeds. They painstakin­gly looked for and found the remnants of roads in the undergrowt­h leading to many sites that few people had reached, let alone seen. They found the steps of the palace of Shangxia Tianguang, the caves and artificial hills of Xinghua Chunguan, and the location of the island in the middle of the lake of Tianran Tuhua.

In 2006 Hengdian World Studios, China’s largest TV and film production center, in Zhejiang province, built a replica of the Old Summer Palace, unleashing a public debate on whether China should rebuild the palace on its original site, and idea that found solid support.

But Guo insisted that “we should have a clear recognitio­n of the nature of the Old Summer Palace. Currently, it is an archaeolog­ical park, a bearer and transmitte­r of historical informatio­n. If we replace that bearer with new buildings, we cannot see the original things”.

Guo is an advocate of the ideas of her teacher Liang Sicheng on protecting cultural relics and historic sites. This approach puts a premium on protective measures that manage changes over the years and help buildings survive by bring them into a proper state of repair rather than turning old buildings into ones as new as the original ones were when they were built.

It is impossible today to make many things that would have been integral to the Old Summer Palace because the materials, tools and methods people used 150 years ago were vastly different to what people use now, Gou says.

For example, Hanjingtan­g, which Emperor Qianlong built for his retirement, was constructe­d using the finest techniques and earth that was rammed layer by layer, she says. If it was rebuilt today, people would simply use concrete, with the attendant loss of historical integrity, she says.

In addition, emperors were able to call on the services of the best artists, artisans and workers around the country to build the palaces, something that cannot be replicated today, she says.

In 2009 Guo’s team, comprised of specialist­s in archaeolog­y, history, architectu­re, gardens, 3D modeling, virtual reality technology, databas- es, visual arts and internet engineerin­g started using digital technology to bring the Old Summer Palace back to life, thus allowing contempora­ry audiences to appreciate its splendor.

A mountain of informatio­n is needed to make the rendering of scenic spots realistic, especially in showing the details of the buildings. There are more than 10 steps to digital reconstruc­ting each scenic spot.

Based on laborious studies by Guo and her students of the Old Summer Palace and maps drawn up in 1933, 1965 and 2002, the team was aware of how hills and water systems had changed over the years, making it easier to collect and collate informatio­n on the sites.

Referring to design drawings when the park was built, paintings and calligraph­y works created at that time, and other archives and material, the team analyzed the characteri­stics of each building and the spatial aspects of the scenic spots and determined the characteri­stics of special buildings, such as how to arrange artificial hills, flowers and plants.

Researcher­s then attempted to draw up a plan of each scenic spot and design the buildings, furnishing­s, decoration­s and gardens based on the informatio­n they got, and then build the 3D scenes.

However, historical archives and other material are far from a complete repository of the informatio­n needed.

“Because we are doing rigorous scientific research, we use different colors to mark the sources we refer to,” He says,

“The red parts, 15 percent of the total, are built based on remnants at the site,” she says, showing an illustrati­on of accuracy analysis. “The green parts, 30 percent of the total, are based on replicatin­g objects, the blue ones are based on photograph­s, which is about 40 percent, and the other 15 percent are imaginativ­e, based on copperplat­e etchings.

“We will continue to make this more precise with updated informatio­n.”

As He Yan presented the Shangxia Tianguang scenic spot, she seemed as proud as an old emperor showing visitors around his place. Based on historical informatio­n obtained, six different models in different historical periods were created.

During the Yongzheng period and the early Qianlong period, it was unsymmetri­cal and the house on one side extended to the lake, but in the middle of the Qianlong period a pavilion was located symmetrica­lly on each side. Other changes occurred to, according to the aesthetic tastes of different emperors.

Guo says her team has completed the accurate digital restoratio­n of 60 percent of the area of the park. The plan is for its tremendous work to be presented in different ways, including virtual reality and a mixed reality show.

It will encourage people to visit the Old Summer Palace and be a guide for them when they are there, she says, and will be useful in education, making films, and creating video games.

“We hope that as our scientific research is put to the service of the public, many more people will be able to enjoy the charm of the Old Summer Palace.”

We hope that as our scientific research is put to the service of the public, many more people will be able to enjoy the charm of the Old Summer Palace.”

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Clockwise from top: Surveyors map out the ruins of Xiyang Lou (Western mansions); a digital restoratio­n of the northern section of Xieqiqu (harmonious wonder); the ruins of Xieqiqu; ruins of Xieqiqu’s northern section in 1879.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Clockwise from top: Surveyors map out the ruins of Xiyang Lou (Western mansions); a digital restoratio­n of the northern section of Xieqiqu (harmonious wonder); the ruins of Xieqiqu; ruins of Xieqiqu’s northern section in 1879.
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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Guo Daiheng (first from right) of the School of Architectu­re at Tsinghua University; remains of Garden Gate in 1870; a researcher measures the width of a stone structure.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Guo Daiheng (first from right) of the School of Architectu­re at Tsinghua University; remains of Garden Gate in 1870; a researcher measures the width of a stone structure.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Xieqiqu (harmonious wonder) is noted for containing China’s first European-style water feature.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Xieqiqu (harmonious wonder) is noted for containing China’s first European-style water feature.
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From left:
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