Project location: The Yin Ruins are located in Anyang City, Henan Province, China.
They are the capital ruins of the late Shang Dynasty (approximately 1600 BC to 1046 BC) and the first documented capital ruins in Chinese history confirmed by archaeology and oracle bone inscriptions.
History and Culture: In 1928, more than 800 pieces of oracle bones with inscriptions, as well as various cultural relics such as bronze, pottery, and bone artifacts, were unearthed from the Yin Ruins.
In 2006, Yin Ruins were listed in the The World Heritage List as a world cultural heritage.
Oracle bone inscriptions, bronze ware, palace ruins, and other artifacts are material remains of the Yin ruins civilization, firmly laying the foundation for the beginning of Chinese history and are treasures of world ancient civilization.
Landscape design: Continuing the scene of the architectural design “The Treasure Cauldron of the Yin Ruins, Emerging from the Ground”, combined with the landscape design concept of “Exploring the Cultural and Historical Journey of the Yin Ruins”, the focus is on creating a landscape space that guides tourists to explore the civilization of the Yin Ruins, creating a vast and atmospheric spatial field.
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