 |
Kaiping Diaolou and Villages feature the Diaolou, multi-storeyed
defensive village houses in Kaiping, which display a complex and
flamboyant fusion of Chinese and Western structural and decorative
forms. They reflect the significant role of Kaiping people in the
development of several countries in South Asia, Australasia and
North America, during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. There
are four groups of Diaolou and twenty of the most symbolic ones
are inscribed on the List. These buildings take three forms: communal
towers built by several families and used as temporary refuge, residential
towers built by individual rich families and used as fortified residences,
and watch towers. Built of stone, pise, brick or concrete, these
buildings represent a complex and confident fusion between Chinese
and Western architectural styles. Retaining a harmonious relationship
with the surrounding landscape, the Diaolou testify to the final
flowering of local building traditions that started in the Ming
period in response to local banditry.
Outstanding Universal Value
The Diaolou and their surrounding villages demonstrate Outstanding
Universal Value for their complex and confident fusion between Chinese
and western architectural styles, for their final flowering of local
tower building traditions, for their completeness and unaltered
state resulting from their short life span as fortified dwellings
and their comparative abandonment and for harmonious relationship
with their agricultural landscape.
Criterion: The Diaolou represent in dramatic physical terms an
important interchange of human values - architectural styles brought
back from North America by returning Chinese and fused with local
rural traditions - within a particular cultural area of the world.
Criterion: The building of defensive towers was a local tradition
in the Kaiping area since Ming times in response to local banditry.
The nominated Diaolou represent the final flourishing of this tradition,
in which the conspicuous wealth of the retuning Chinese contributed
to the spread of banditry and their towers were an extreme response.
Criterion: The main towers, with their settings and through their
flamboyant display of wealth, are a type of building that reflects
the significant role played by Kaiping people in the development
of several countries in South Asia, Australasia, and North America,
during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the continuing
links between the Kaiping community and Chinese communities in these
parts of the world.
The wholeness and intactness of the nominated properties are evident
insofar as all the elements that express their values are still
in place; the size of each of the properties is adequate as the
features and processes that convey the significance are fully represented
in the towers and their surrounding villages of small houses and
farmland. The nominated Diaolou, their surrounding village houses,
and the agricultural landscape are all authentic, apart from certain
houses in Sanmenli Village.
Since 2001, all the Diaolou are protected as national monuments
under the Law for the Protection of Cultural Relics, 1982 and also
covered by Provincial and Municipal Regulations. A buffer zone has
been established. The overall state of conservation of the Diaolou
is good; the state of conservation of village houses and the agricultural
landscape is reasonable. No extensive conservation works have been
undertaken. Nevertheless minor repair works, are carried out where
necessary, and inappropriate building interventions have been reversed.
A Management Plan for the nominated property has been drawn up by
Beijing University under the auspices of the People's Government
of Kaiping City. It has been implemented since 2005.
|