The Dàjìng Gé Pavillon (上海古城墙和大境阁) is a museum and ancient temple of Shanghai , incorporating the last remaining portions of the walls of the Old City of Shanghai . Most of the walls were dismantled in 1912, and today only this portion remains.
4-589: In 1959 the Dajing Ge Pavillon was listed as a cultural relic and put under municipal protection . It was renovated in 1995, and then opened to the public. The building houses a temple and a small museum with photographs of ancient Shanghai (上海老城厢史迹展). Address: Dajing Lu 239, Huangpu (黄浦区大境路239号) 31°13′35″N 121°28′44″E / 31.2265°N 121.4788°E / 31.2265; 121.4788 ( Dàjìng Gé Pavillon ) Major Site to Be Protected for Its Historical and Cultural Value at
8-645: The National Level#Sites Protected at various levels A national priority protected site is the highest-level national protection for immovable cultural relics in China. The designation was first created under the 1961 Provisional Regulations on the Protection and Management of Cultural Relics, which evolved into the Law on the Protection of Cultural Relics. According to the 2002 Cultural Relics Protection Law of
12-647: The People's Republic of China, the National Cultural Heritage Administration of the State Council selects those with significant historical, artistic, and scientific value as national key cultural relics protection units. National key cultural relics protection units shall not be demolished; if they need to be relocated, they must be reported to the State Council for approval by applications from
16-473: The people's government of the provincial administrative region. In 1999 it was reported that there were some 350,000 immovable cultural properties in China, of which 70,000 were protected at one of the three main levels, in addition to some 10,000,000 movable cultural properties held by state institutions alone. Of these, as of October 2019, 5,058 Sites Protected at the National Level have been designated by
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