20 Rare Chinese and Foreign Buildings: How many of these buildings have you been to around the world?
(1) Taishan Dai Temple, commonly known as "Dongyue Temple", is the largest and most complete ancient building complex, is the place where the emperors of the past dynasties worshipped, and one of the four ancient buildings in China.
(2) Hangzhou Liuhe Pagoda is located in the south of the West Lake, on the Yuelun Mountain on the bank of the Qiantang River, Zhiyuan Zen Master built for the Zhenjiang tide, taking the meaning of Buddhism "Six Harmony Respect".
(3) Hengshan Hanging Temple is the only remaining temple of three religions in one, which was built more than 1400 years ago, and the ancient craftsmen built the Hanging Temple according to the requirements of Taoism, "not hearing the sound of chickens and dogs barking".
(4) Renovation of the Moscow Central Telegraph Office: The main concept of this project is to restore the space to its original state, with brick columns, concrete columns, ceilings and rough wooden shell traces of the 1920s, and the 80-year-old wooden structure is a testament to the history of the building.
(5) The Korea National Eco Park, which showcases the ecological environment of the Korean Peninsula and collects a variety of precious biological species in Korea.
(6) U.S. oil reserves are stored in underground caverns hewn out of salt rock, which is both inexpensive and environmentally safe because salt rock has low porosity, low permeability, and self-healing properties that do not react with oil.
(7) The Georgian Chronicle is a monument located near Tbilisi.
(8) There is a famous sinkhole landscape in Guatemala.
(9) 1959, Shenzhen reservoir construction site.
(10) The world's tallest known natural arch is located in the western part of Xinjiang, with a height of 365 meters. Its location is very remote and was not rediscovered until 20 years ago.
(11) For more than a month, the 22-million-ton building has been moving at a speed of 45 centimeters per hour, while 600 employees still work in the building.
(12) Marvelous overgrowth in the jungle of Angkor Wat, Taprom, Cambodia.
(13) The strange-looking T-tree, an evergreen shrub or tree with an unusually smooth red bark that is easy to peel. It is native to California and relies on wildfires to survive because its seeds only germinate after exposure to fire.
(14) Carved stone twisted rope column. From the Xll portal, the Church of St. Lazare da Vallon. France.
(15) Mount Reina casts shadows at sunrise in the early morning. Filmed near the University of Tacoma in Washington.
(16) Yecoman guarding outside the Tower of London, 1898.
(17) In 1979, a gas station on Brovalsky Avenue in Kyiv, Ukraine, had a sci-fi feel.
(18) Huntington Beach, California, during the oil boom of 1928.
(19) Wudang Mountain Tianzhu Peak, the type of Xuanwu.
(20) In Jeollanam-do, at the southwestern tip of the Korean Peninsula, there is a "folk village" in which residents preserve their old way of life.