The Potala Palace, a tourist destination in the capital of
southwest China's Tibet
Autonomous Region, is enjoying a quieter busy season thanks to
a restriction on the number of its visitors.
The 1,300-year-old red and white palace, the former office
compound of Tibetan rulers which has served as the residence of
Tibetan religious leaders, the Dalai Lamas, since the 17th century,
formerly received an average of 1,500 visitors and pilgrims every
day, with the record number of visitors in one day at 5,000.
Cultural relic experts and officials believed such a heavy flow
of visitors posed a threat to the ancient palace and cultural
relics in it.
With many ancient Tibetan classics, frescos and sculptures in
it, the majestic Potala Palace is regarded as the greatest
achievement of Tibetans in architecture and art. The palace was
listed as a World Cultural Heritage site in
1994.
To better protect the world-famous palace, local tourism and
cultural relic authorities decided at the end of May that the
palace can receive no more than 850 visitors and pilgrims a day. It
is now open six hours a day.
According to Qamba Gaisang, an official in charge of the
management of the palace, only 50 visitors are admitted into the
palace every 20 minutes for four hours in the morning, while the
time span expands to 30 minutes for two hours in the afternoon.
Previously, a visit to the palace would take at least three
hours and the structure endured a weight of some 45 tons during the
rush hours, with the weight of each visitor calculated as 60
kilograms, Qamba said.
Also, the number of visitors to the palace increases every year
by 20 percent.
The 113-meter-tall, 13-floor palace was built with earth, stone
and wood. Few nails were used in the construction.
"We were afraid that the heavy flow of visitors to the ancient
palace might cause the rafters to break and the ground to crack,"
Qamba said.
The famous Fawangdong, or the Cavity for the King, is the
narrowest place in the palace, where a maximum of 15 people can
stand. However, Gao Feng, a tourist guide, said that sometimes
scores of visitors, at times even about a hundred, would crowd
there before the restriction was made.
"The crowds were not only a threat to the safety of the palace,
but would also dampen visitors' moods," Gao said.
"While on the one hand, the restriction can alleviate the
tension imposed by swarming visitors on the ancient building,
visitors themselves can also benefit from the restriction, as they
can enjoy their visits with more leisure," Qamba said.
Qamba said that the restriction will not greatly affect
pilgrimage to the palace, as the palace sees few pilgrims during
the bustling tourism season when local farmers and herders are
occupied by their summer work.
The management has also strengthened measures to prevent fires
in the palace. There used to be some 10,000 ghee lamps, which Qamba
said were a great danger to the safety of the cultural relics in
the palace.
The number has now been reduced by half and a special salvage
corps was recently established to prevent fires, and
security-checking devices will also soon be installed, Qamba
said.
According to Xu Fei, deputy director of the regional cultural
relic bureau, the autonomous region boasts some 2,000 cultural
relic sites, 27 of which are under state level protection. The
central government has invested over 300 million yuan (over US$36
million) in the maintenance and protection of cultural relics in
the region since 1951.
Seipei Hubert, a tourist from Germany, said that restricting the
number of visitors is a good way of better protecting the palace.
"It's good for both the ancient palace and for the visitors." he
noted.
Qamba suggested that tourists book tickets at least a day ahead
of their visits.
(Xinhua News Agency August 15, 2003)