1, Taihu stone
There is a fascinating meaning here. The veranda is paved with slate, with a small bridge in the middle and a gooseneck on both sides. You can sit and watch the scenery. In the middle of the veranda stands the Taihu Stone Mo Lifeng, which is about 2.3 meters high and slim, hence the name Beauty Waist.
2. Fish Music Hall
There are towering old trees around Yulexie, and you can see the fish in the middle of the pool by the railing. The splash wall on the stream in front of the stream reflects the characteristics of Jiangnan gardens. The stream is only a few feet long, and the flower wall divides it in two. There are leaking windows and semicircular holes in the wall. From the side of Yule Oblique, there is a wisteria which has spent more than 300 years. Every early spring, the branches are full of white flowers.
3. Library building
Famous Shanghai painters and painters once held the Yuyuan Garden Painting and Calligraphy Exhibition here, and Ren Bonian, Xugu, Wu Changshuo, Gaochun, Pu, and others often gathered and exhibited their works here, which is the birthplace of the maritime painting school. After liberation, famous Shanghai painters Shen, Liu Haisu and Xie visited and studied the painting and calligraphy art in Yuyuan Garden for many times, and wrote inscriptions for the painting and calligraphy building.
4. Cuixiutang
Cuixiutang was built in the 25th year of Qing Qianlong (1760). Hidden in the northern foot of the big rockery, facing the cliff, leaning against the high wall in the north, with flowers and elegant courtyard. You can sit quietly in the hall, open the window and watch the big rockery up close. Now I open an antique shop.
5. Yangshantang
Yangshantang is a five-story hall with a cloister in the north and a winding sill beside the pool where you can sit and rest. Wang Xizhi's Preface to the Orchid Pavilion in the Jin Dynasty recorded the inscription "There are mountains here". The name of "Juanyu Building" is taken from the poem "Sunset Rain Pearl Curtain on the Western Hills" written by Wang Bo, a poet in the early Tang Dynasty.