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Palace Museum Looking to Expand and Preserve
Published on: 2013-11-14
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altThe Palace Museum, housed in the Forbidden City in Beijing, will expand its exhibition area to alleviate the pressure of huge tourist numbers.
 
During the weeklong National Day holiday, the museum attracted more than 710,000 visitors with the peak daily number reaching 175,000 on 2 October, according to the museum.
 
Shan Jixiang, director of the museum, said on Wednesday that he felt confident the facility could cope with more tourists in the future, with many projects under construction to meet that goal.
 
It plans to restore the ancient Internal Affairs Department, located in the western Palace Museum, and has received approval from the World Heritage Committee.
 
Some temporary buildings, garden houses and workplaces of research institutes will be gradually moved out of the key visiting area of the Palace Museum, Shan said.
 
As of 2020, 76 percent of the palace will be open to public, while currently it has only opened 45 percent of the area, he said.
 
Since the museum was established in 1925, most of its western part, which was called "the women's world" and housed the Emperor's family, has been closed to the public, but it will be open to visitors by 2015.
 
A 2,800-square-meter exhibition area will be constructed at the Meridian Gate to display the museum's art collections.
 
Another exhibition centre to display ancient architectural collections is under construction at the East Glorious Gate.
 
Also, for the first time, tourists will be able to visit a section of the high city wall that connects the East Glorious Gate to the southeast corner tower.
 
Shan said one-sixth of the city wall would be open to visitors.
Another major project is the construction of a new north branch, which aims to ease pressure on the Palace Museum and is expected to attract 3 million visitors after completion.
 
The north branch, which was a brick kiln for the court during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912), covers 476,000 square metres in the north-western Haidian district, 40 km from the city centre. The construction of the branch site is a priority on the museum's eight-year safety campaign.
 
In three to five years, according to plans, the site will house a repair centre for large artefacts such as carpets, lamps and ancient vehicles, a research centre for technology conservation, an exhibition space, a digital centre and a palace garden centre.
 
One of the first projects at the site is a training workshop for palace-style architecture construction, which had an opening ceremony on 9 November.
 
During the first eight-day training sessions, 15 wood-workers for the museum will receive classes on such skills as reading ancient architectural drawings, the characteristics of the Forbidden City architecture and the repair of palace-style architecture.
 
"A tradition of nearly 300 years, the palace-style architecture craft once only served the royal family and absorbed the best techniques nationwide, developing many strict rules," says Li Yongge, a teacher for the workshop who is a Palace Museum researcher as well as the state-level intangible cultural heritage inheritor of palace-style architecture.
 
"We are losing these rules, materials and techniques," Li said. "What we are doing is a race against modernisation."
 
Shan said at the ceremony, "The craft of Palace-style architecture has played a significant role in building, repairing and protecting the nearly 600-year-old Forbidden City. What we value is not just the architecture complex itself, but the building technique and its inheritance."
 
The other project launched the same day and expected to be completed in 233 days is a palace garden research centre.
 
The centre covers 55,000 sqare metres and includes a teaching area and culture zone. A greenhouse is already in use.
 
"The project will significantly improve the cultivation of ornamental plants and flowers within the main site of the Palace Museum, and eliminate potential safety hazards," Shan said, adding that the garden research centre will be open to the public when it is completed.
 
Taipei Palace Museum Director Fung Ming-chu visited the north branch site and attended the opening ceremony while in Beijing for the fourth Two Cross-Straits Palace Museums Symposium.
 
"I heard about the north branch construction for the first time this April when Director Shan visited Taipei Palace Museum, and I am amazed that the site has already functioned this fast," Fung said, adding that a 45,000-sq-m new south branch site for the Taipei Palace Museum is still at the stage of laying a foundation after 12 year of planning.
 
"Drawing support from social forces, the two Palace Museums are doing their best to make their collections better known to the public," Fung said. "I am sure the two will have a lot of experience exchanges and continue to learn from each other in the future."
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