Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - What are the interesting places in Xingtai?

What are the interesting places in Xingtai?

Empty Mountain Baiyun Cave: Empty Mountain Baiyun Cave is located in Lincheng County, Xingtai City, Hebei Province, 6 kilometers east of the county seat, 56 kilometers south of Xingtai City and 86 kilometers north of Shijiazhuang City. It is very convenient to take a bus along Beijing-Guangzhou Railway, Beijing-Shenzhen Expressway and 107 National Road to Ganshan Baiyun Cave.

Baiyun Cave in Gangshan, Xingtai is a rare karst cave landscape in northern China. Now there are four big caves with a total area of 4000 square meters. The first cave hall is spacious and magnificent, with mountains and water, which is a peaceful scene on earth; The second cave hall is hung with curtains, magnificent as heaven; The third cave hall is full of strange rocks, which is eerie and looks like an imaginary hell. The fourth cave hall is densely covered with branches and pools, much like the Dragon Palace. The cave has complete karst modeling, dense landscape per unit area, magnificent landscape pattern and well-preserved original background. The four caves have different landscapes with their own characteristics.

Baiyun Cave in Ganshan Mountain has become a scenic spot with mountains, water and caves as a whole and complete tourism services, with hundreds of thousands of Chinese and foreign tourists visiting here every year.

Qingfeng Building: Qingfeng Building is located at the northern end of Antique Street, Qiaodong District, Xingtai City (in front of the government office building in the old city center). It was built in the Tang Dynasty and rebuilt in the Ming Dynasty. The building is more than 70 feet high, divided into three floors, with platforms, arches and cornices below. Solemn and majestic, with national style. It is called "overlooking the county building" and is a scenic spot in Xingtai. According to reports, during Chenghua period of Ming Dynasty, Li Guangheng, the magistrate of Xingzhou, spared no expense to rebuild this building, aiming at providing entertainment places for the feudal literati class. According to the contemporary Jin Chen's "The Story of the Qingfeng Building", after Li Guangheng built this building, he "gathered guests to board it in his leisure time, and the four holes were wide and overlooked".