Garden on the Great Wall—A Sustainable Solution for the Plants on the Top Surface of the Great Wall Heritage Site

Author:

Pan Jianbin123,Tao Tao1ORCID,Huang Tiantian1,Tang Yuyang4,Xu Nuo1,Li Zihan1,Tang Zihui1,Chen Xiaoyu1

Affiliation:

1. School of Architecture and Urban Planning, Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Beijing 100044, China

2. Beijing Key Laboratory of Green Building and Energy-Efficiency Technology, Beijing 100044, China

3. Beijing Energy Conservation & Sustainable Urban and Rural Development Provincial and Ministry Co-Construction Collaboration Innovation Center, Beijing 100044, China

4. Beijing Great Wall Cultural Research Institute, Beijing 100044, China

Abstract

The Great Wall is a world-renowned cultural heritage site and a national key protected cultural relic in China. The plants on the top surface of the Great Wall heritage site are one of the factors leading to the occurrence and continuous deterioration of the Great Wall. Therefore, there is ongoing academic controversy on how to scientifically dispose of the plants on the top surface of the Great Wall heritage site. Taking Beijing Dazhuangke Great Wall as an example, the preliminary field research was completed. This paper further describes the key technology for the disposal of remaining roots after removing the ground part of the plants from the top surface of the Great Wall heritage site and clarifies the basic idea of using the original covered soil on the top surface of the Great Wall heritage site, back-filling the original covered soil stripped via reparation of the layers and the regenerated plants in a seed bank to create ‘soft capping’ protection. This study provides a basic framework for ‘soft capping’ on the top surface of the Great Wall heritage site and construction of the cultural landscape of the ‘Garden on the Great Wall’.

Funder

Major Project of Beijing Social Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference35 articles.

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3. Zhang, Y.K., Li, S.Y., Tan, L.F., and Zhou, J.Y. (2021). Distribution and Integration of Military Settlements’ Cultural Heritage in the Large Pass City of the Great Wall in the Ming Dynasty: A Case Study of Juyong Pass Defense Area. Sustainability, 13.

4. ICOMOS (2021). The Charter of Fortification Protection, ICOMOS.

5. Change, C. (2019). The Future of Our Pasts: Engaging Cultural Heritage in Climate Action Outline of Climate Change and Cultural Heritage, International Council on Monuments and Sites—ICOMOS.

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