China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Suzhou issues guideline in water towns’ UNESCO heritage bid

- By XING YI

Suzhou has released a water town protection and conservati­on guideline in support of a joint applicatio­n by 14 Chinese water towns in the lower reaches of the Yangtze River to become a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The guideline, which will become effective on March 1, sets a standard to preserve ancient water towns in Suzhou. The city is heading the applicatio­n as it is home to nine water towns included in the joint applicatio­n.

The applicatio­n, first started in 2001 by six water towns in Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces including Zhouzhuang, Tongli and Wuzhen, has now expanded to include 14 water towns.

As the applicatio­n is expected to be evaluated by internatio­nal experts in 2020, the guideline released on Jan 3 will serve as a legal framework for the preservati­on of water towns to meet the standards as a world heritage site, according to Li Jie, director of the joint applicatio­n office based in Suzhou.

The guideline states that restoratio­n of ancient buildings should use the same materials and techniques as those used when they were built, prohibits overexploi­tation and encourages residents to continue their longobserv­ed traditions.

Bridges, narrow stone lanes and traditiona­l ancient houses built along canals are the physical features of Chinese water towns, while local traditions such as festivals, handicraft­s and foods are their cultural features, some of which have a history of more than 1,000 years.

Most water towns are located on the eastern side of Taihu Lake in the Yangtze River Delta where the land is interlaced with rivers and canals, supporting numerous prosperous small water towns.

Ruan Yisan, a professor from Tongji University who specialize­s in historical town preservati­on, said on a forum held in Zhouzhuang that the unique human habitat of water towns serves witness to the preservati­on of Chinese cultural traditions amid the country’s modernizat­ion.

Six Chinese heritage sites — including the Forbidden City, the Great Wall, the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang, Gansu province, and the Mausoleum of the First Qin Emperor in Xi’an, Shaanxi province — were listed by UNESCO in 1987.

The number grew to 52 after three decades, ranking second in the world. Italy tops the list with 53 as of the end of 2017.

 ?? QIN QINGHE/ FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A police officer arranges fireworks that are about to be destroyed in Rongan county, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, on Tuesday. Law enforcers have previously launched four operations against the illegal production, sale, storage and transport of...
QIN QINGHE/ FOR CHINA DAILY A police officer arranges fireworks that are about to be destroyed in Rongan county, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, on Tuesday. Law enforcers have previously launched four operations against the illegal production, sale, storage and transport of...
 ?? LIANG ZHEN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A man rows a boat on a river in Wuzhen water town in Zhejiang province last year.
LIANG ZHEN / FOR CHINA DAILY A man rows a boat on a river in Wuzhen water town in Zhejiang province last year.

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