Coco Palace

TEL:(605)718-2626

FAX:(605)718-2678

1900 N Maple Ave, Rapid City, South Dakota,  57701

Open Hours
Sun - Thurs:
11:00am - 10:00pm
Fri - Sat:
11:00am - 11:00pm

Sushi Bar
Thai
Chinese
Beer & Wine

CocoPalaces.com
                             
Our other restaurants:

Coco Palace

TEL:(605)361-7252
2530 S Louise Ave,
Sioux Falls, SD  57106

www.cocopalaces.com/fsd
Click to visit menu

                                            

China Wok
TEL:(605)716-9965
        (605)716-9973

(WE DELIVERY)
1575 La Crosse St. Suite B, 
Rapid City, SD  57701

cocopalaces.com/chinawok
Click to visit menu

                                            

Super Hong Kong
Buffet

Tel:(605)716-4664
      (605)716-5664

927 E. North Street,
Rapid City, SD 57701
cocopalaces.com/hongkong
Click to visit menu
                             

Culture
5 Minutes Refresh...

Pavilion

The Chinese pavilion (called ting in Chinese) is a very common sight in the country, for you can notice such buildings almost in every city. Sometimes, even in a tiny garden covering no more than one hundred square meters, there might be a fancy one as well.

Normally built of wood, bamboo or stone, pavilions can be in any of such plane figures as triangle, square, hexagonal, octagonal, a shape of five-petal flower or a fan. No matter how they look like, however, all of them have one thing in common: there are no walls to support the roof, only columns. This unique feature is, actually, how the Chinese pavilion is defined.

In ancient times, pavilions served various purposes, without mentioning those luxurious ones for entertaining the upper class in imperial or private gardens. A wayside liang ting, (cooling pavilion) could provide weary trekkers with a place for rest and shelter them from the vigor-consuming heat in summer.
Some pavilions, however, were erected to protect such important memorials recording certain historical events or commemorating some outstanding figures. Since most of the memorials are stone tablets engraved with words, this kind of pavilion is often called bei ting (stele pavilion) in Chinese.

Ocassionally, you might find a pavilion over a water well, with a dormer window in its roof. The pavilion was, no doubt, to keep the well water clean, but how about the window? Ancient Chinese always believed that water untouched by sunlight was not purified, and would cause diseases, so they built such a dormer window to allow the sun to cast its rays into the well.

Nowadays, the purposes of pavilions have become much more simple. Part of the landscape, they also make a nice place for tourists to take a rest and snap pictures.

07-09-28 22:35
Url : http://www.asiavtour.com/China_culture_a37_s5.html
Copyright © 2007-2019 Design By Enymedia Inc. EatNear.Com Asiavtour.Com Restaurant Login>>>