Mountainside village turned living museum
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The Hui-style architecture is marked by white walls and black-tiled roofs. [Photo by Rosemary Bolger/chinadaily.com.cn] |
Huangling sets expectations high with its claim to be "the most beautiful countryside in China" plastered across its promotional material. Such a big statement may rouse the skeptics, but it's better to leave those quibbles at the cable car door and simply enjoy the view.
The village has been turned into a living museum and its owner the Wuyuan Countryside Development Company does not pretend otherwise. The private company's largest shareholder Wu Xiangyang saw the location's potential as a tourism attraction 18 years ago. At that stage, there were less than 600 people living in rundown houses.
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Vegetables are laid out to dry in the sun during autumn to be used during the cold winter. [Photo by Rosemary Bolger/chinadaily.com.cn] |
"Most people want to go outside (the village) to work so few people were left in the village. If we waited another 5 to 10 years, it would have soon vanished," Wu says.
The company has poured large sums into repairing and restoring the Hui-style houses known for their solid white walls (residents believed a dark room was more peaceful) and black-tiled roofs.




















