[The
renovators aimed to remake Sideng’s former marketplace to be fully consistent
with historical design and artwork, a commitment rare in China . They say the project could be a model for
other village renovation efforts in the country. It has been praised by Unesco,
the United Nations cultural agency.]
By
Edward Wong
A
theater in Sideng’s village square. Credit Adam Dean for
The
|
SHAXI,
China —
The woman shuffled around her shop in the village square, telling visitors how
she came to be selling wooden swords and woven slippers to tourists rather than
tending to her fields.
He
Yuqing, 60, wore a blue tunic and apron, common among older ethnic Bai women of
this verdant valley in the Himalayan foothills. In the plaza outside, afternoon
sunlight fell across cobblestones on which horse caravans once trod.
She
said she had been renting the shop from the local government for eight years. If
an international architecture team had not restored the square’s ramshackle
wooden buildings, she said, she would be doing hard labor among her fields of
corn, fruit and grains.
“Before
they restored this, it just wasn’t as beautiful,” she said. “They did a good
job.”
In
a project little known outside China , a Swiss-led team worked for years to
renovate the square of Sideng Village. The square was the site of the main
market in Shaxi, a valley dotted with Bai villages in the Hengduan Mountains of southwest China .
The
renovators aimed to remake Sideng’s former marketplace to be fully consistent
with historical design and artwork, a commitment rare in China . They say the project could be a model for
other village renovation efforts in the country. It has been praised by Unesco,
the United Nations cultural agency.
The
restored buildings include a centuries-old Buddhist temple that had been
converted to government offices after the Communists took over China in 1949. Facing the temple is a four-story
theater with soaring eaves and an outdoor performance terrace for local
orchestras. Every June, valley residents converge on the plaza to hold the
Torch Festival, in which they erect and light on fire a towering pine trunk.
The
village square is now considered by some to be one of the most beautiful in China . It evokes the era when the Tea and Horse
Caravan Trailpassed through the valley. This part of Yunnan Province lies east of theTibetan plateau, and
Tibetans traded horses for tea that was then transported across the plateau, all
the way to Lhasa .
Yet,
Shaxi remains free of the tourist hordes that swarm the streets of Lijiang, a
drive of just a couple of hours to the north, and Dali, a couple of hours to
the south. They, too, have renovated ancient town centers, but the new homes
and storefronts there were built haphazardly.
“When
the Chinese do this, they think, ‘How can I attract as many people as possible
to this place?’” said Chris Barclay, the American owner of a boutique
guesthouse, the Old Theatre Inn, in the countryside outside the Sideng square. “None
of that has happened here, which is great.”
Mr.
Barclay and his wife have been using their own money to renovate thePear Orchard Temple , mainly in thanks to the fertility aspect of
the goddess Guanyin there. His Thai wife, a Buddhist, became pregnant at age 45
after praying to Guanyin on a visit; their first child had died years earlier.
Mr.
Barclay said he had also been inspired by the marketplace work done in Sideng.
That
project began with Jacques Feiner, a Swiss conservation expert who had worked
on the old city in Sana , Yemen . Around 2000, he was looking for a project
along the South
Silk Road
and settled on the Shaxi
Valley because the scale of the Sideng marketplace
was manageable, said Huang Yinwu, a team leader and Swiss-trained architect.
At
Mr. Feiner’s urging, the World Monuments Fund, based in New York , added the marketplace to its 2002 watch
list of 100 Most Endangered Sites. The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in
Zurich and the government of Jianchuan County put together a conservation team.
Mr.
Huang, originally from Hubei
Province , joined the team and came to Shaxi in 2003. The
team had an advantage doing conservation here: The local Bai carpenters are
considered among the most skilled in China and get commissions across the country.
“In
this process, the main purpose was to understand the local tradition, the local
knowledge, the local craftsmanship,” Mr. Huang said. “We wanted to see how far
we could go with the local knowledge.”
The
team restored low-slung wooden facades around the old marketplace and a 100-year-old
caravansary. Most of the plaza’s buildings are just a century old because they
have been repeatedly rebuilt — bandits burned down the buildings in constant
raids.
When
the project began, most of the buildings had been abandoned. In 2006, the buds
of commerce appeared. A couple from faraway Shenzhen asked to rent one of the
smaller buildings near the theater; they wanted to live there and turn it into
a cafe.
Mr.
Huang said this went against his idea for the plaza — he had intended for the
fronts to be shops and the interiors to be courtyards open to the public.
“I
didn’t agree to that,” he said with a laugh as he sat in the square one recent
morning, pointing to the Old Tree Cafe run by the couple. “The government
wanted them to move in, so they started living there and running the business
there.”
The
Xingjiao Temple took four years to refurbish. A fierce blue
guardian deity and a red one flank the main entrance. The Bai here worship
local gods and practice Esoteric Buddhism.
“Having
the temple and theater together facing each other is a local custom,” Mr. Huang
said. “The locals think the Buddha should enjoy the performances along with the
people. I’m working on another temple in Shaxi where there is a stage in the
main temple area. You move a wooden god to face the stage.”
That
temple, Chenghuang, is part of the next phase of the renovation project, as
envisioned by Mr. Huang: founding community centers across Shaxi to help
residents tap into the tourist economy.
Mr.
Huang, who still lives in Shaxi even though his Swiss teammates have left, said
the first such center would be at Chenghuang Temple . His plans call for the centers to have computers
where villagers can go online; tourists following cycling and walking routes
through the valley would mingle with the villagers at those centers.
Thirteen
villages would be part of this network, and residents might start homegrown
industries like craft beer to appeal to the tourist crowds, he said.
“We
can have Internet-based education,” he said. “This is a way to help people to
understand more and get the capability to develop things on their own.”
Guesthouses
and cafes have boomed in Sideng Village , but they are mostly run by outsider Chinese
rather than locals.
The
Shaxi Horse Pen 46 Youth Hostel next to the central theater was opened in 2010
by Huo Wanfei, 36, who moved here from Sichuan Province after visiting as a backpacker. Now that the
Swiss-led team is done with the plaza, these Chinese outsiders are the main
force behind renovating buildings, mostly to start tourist businesses.
Ms.
Huo said she had employed local carpenters and completed the renovation after
much trial and error.
“It
made me realize there’s a way in nature that makes things work out,” she said.
The
evolution of the village is beginning to mirror what happened in Lijiang. The
locals are renting out their homes to outsiders and moving elsewhere. So
visitors to Sideng increasingly meet Chinese outsiders and not Bai locals like
Ms. He.
“The
market is driving Shaxi in this direction,” Mr. Huang said. “This is not
something in our control. That is why I’m doing this new project to encourage a
community economy.”
Follow
Edward Wong on Twitter @comradewong.