A section Pingyao Ancient Town's historic wall, a world cultural heritage site in north China's Shanxi Province, collapsed on Sunday due to lack of maintenance.
The 17.3-meter-long wall, part of the South Gate enclosure at the more than 500-year-old ancient town, collapsed Sunday afternoon, officials with Pingyao County Cultural Relics Bureau, said.
A long-time lack of maintenance is believed to be the reason for the collapse, an official with the bureau surnamed Gao said yesterday.
"The section of ancient wall looks fine on the outside but the tamped earth inside the layer of bricks had slackened," Gao told China Daily via a telephone interview. "A gust of wind can blow out dry earth from the bricks."
A repair team was sent to the site on Monday by local government officials. Most of the ancient wall had been repaired in recent years and maintenance work continued annually, Gao said.
Only a small section had not been revamped, Gao said.
Pingyao, a small town about 90 kilometers away from Taiyuan, the capital of Shanxi, is famous for its well-preserved the surrounding the town.
The town was placed on the United Nations' World Heritage List in 1997.
The county's history can be traced back to the Western Zhou Dynasty (11th century BC-771 BC). The present wall was built during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644).
The city wall makes up an unbroken rectangle and features a rammed-earth-and-brick structure that goes 6.2 kilometers around.
It rises 10 meters high and 8-12 meters wide at the bottom and 2.5-6 meters on the top.
Local officials said the wall collapse at the South Gate of the town will not harm tourism because the front square of the gate has been undergoing restoration since May and is closed to visitors.
Pingyao has been one of the major tourist sites in the province. An international photography festival has been held in the town annually since 2001.
(China Daily October 20, 2004)