The flat seat is equipped with a beauty chair (a chair similar to a cool chair) for people to rest on the railing and watch the scenery. Climbing up this mountain, you can see a panoramic view of the Ganjiang River.
Pavilion: "A heavy house is a building, and a four-bay room is a pavilion", which is an important distinguishing point between a building and a pavilion. Usually it is difficult to tell which building is a building and which building is a pavilion. In daily life, people confuse architecture with pavilion, and even the word pavilion is used together. But in ancient times, there was a strict distinction between architecture and pavilions.
The similarity between buildings and pavilions is that they are both "heavy houses", that is to say, buildings and pavilions are two or more floors. However, there are windows and doors all around the pavilion, and there are also selected flat seats around it for people to walk in the pavilion and enjoy the scenery.
The ancient book "Ming Shi" records: "The pavilion will stop. So stop the parade. " It can be seen that the pavilion is a building for people to rest or enjoy the scenery. It is said that the ancient pavilion refers to a building on the roadside for people to rest. In real life, you can still find some embryonic forms of "book kiosks", such as roadside kiosks and newsstands.
Terrace: also known as observation deck, refers to a terrace-style building that is higher than the ground and allows people to climb high and overlook. In ancient times, Taiwan Province was mainly used for training and watching plays. In landscape architecture, it is often combined with pavilions and pavilions, and the viewing platform for overlooking the mountains and forests is mostly built on the highland or by the pool near the water. For example, the "Autumn Moon in Pinghu" in Hangzhou West Lake is a famous platform for enjoying the moon near the lake.
Building: "The building is heavy." A building is a house for people to live in. In landscape architecture, it is mostly two floors, and some have three floors. Lou appeared in the Warring States period, mainly to see the enemy lines, and later developed into a residential house for people to live in, mainly for women.