China Daily

Forbidden City glows as night tours open to public marking Lantern Festival

- By WANG KAIHAO wangkaihao@chinadaily.com.cn

To help shine a light on the Lantern Festival, Beijing’s Forbidden City on Tuesday night was unconventi­onally sparkling.

The 720,000-square-meter complex of palatial edifices, which is now officially known as the Palace Museum, was lit up for the event, which many consider the unofficial end of the extended Lunar New Year holiday period.

About 3,000 visitors were allowed to visit the Gate of Supreme Harmony and step onto the outer city walls of the museum to enjoy a night tour, which was graced by 350 pairs of red lanterns.

The south and north gates of the Forbidden City and other main buildings throughout the palace were also bathed in red and a salvo of light.

The festival, which falls on Tuesday, is the 15th day of the first month in the lunar calendar. The hanging of lanterns is a traditiona­l activity to celebrate the event.

Digital projection of A Panorama of Rivers and Mountains and Along the River during the Qingming Festival, two Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127) landscape paintings, were also visible on the roofs of some structures.

According to Shan Jixiang, director of the Palace Museum, special lighting technology was employed to protect the wooden architectu­re and prevent the possibilit­y of fires.

It is the first time the museum designed a night visit route for the general public.

The Forbidden City was China’s imperial palace from 1420 to 1911. It became a publicly owned museum in 1925, and now houses 1.86 million cultural relics.

Its outer walls are about 3,400 meters long, with around threequart­ers of them accessible to the public during the day.

Around 500 tour participan­ts were able to secure online reservatio­ns on Sunday, with the free tickets snapped up in just 10 minutes.

Others included invited guests such as model workers and soldiers in appreciati­on for their societal contributi­ons.

Another night tour is to take place on Wednesday night. But Shan said further evaluation is necessary to determine whether regular night visits to the compound will be offered in the future.

Neverthele­ss, he said some important days in the lunar calendar, like the Mid-Autumn Festival, would possibly become new occasions for nocturnal tours, and more regions other than city walls might be opened after the sun sets.

“The night scene of the Palace Museum was even more marvelous than I thought,” said Chang Zhifu, 77, a visitor who came to the museum on Tuesday night.

This extraordin­ary night was also an unpreceden­ted experience for museum employees.

“I’ve regularly been on night shift in the palace over the past few years,” said Wu Wei.

“I’ve never seen such a bright Forbidden City.”

The lighting of the museum was also part of 17 lantern fairs all across Beijing on Tuesday. Other locations included Jingshan Park and Yuanmingyu­an.

I’ve regularly been on night shift in the palace over the past few years. I’ve never seen such a bright Forbidden City.” Wu Wei, an employee of the Palace Museum

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