That principle is apparent in many of the buildings. The Thean Hou Temple, originally built in the early Qing Dynasty by businessmen from Fujian province, was recreated on a 1,508-square-meter site by craftsmen from Quanzhou, Fujian province. Exquisitely carved stone pillars were transported to the site from Quanzhou.
Baoshou Hall, originally built in the late Qing Dynasty, also features complicated carvings that took 20 craftsmen about three months to complete.
"Many craftsmen were around 70 years old when they joined to recreate the town. Many of them haven't yet found the right people to hand their skills down to and some work in the town might be their last handwork," Huo says.
The local government also tried its best to retain original items. The recreated town still has 95 percent of the historic town's road and water systems.
Tourists, especially those from the north of China, visit Tai'erzhuang to experience traditional life in a water town.
"We celebrated the 25th anniversary of our wedding here," says Cheng Boli, an engineer from Beijing. "This town is better than the water towns in the southern part of China. You can enjoy a leisurely life here."
Walking through the town, we frequently saw ancient piers and wharfs that still stand at waterways that are now used by tourists to reach their destination by boat.
The 53 buildings that survived the war also still stand, some bearing bullet holes from the fighting.
The local government has also added new things to fit with the structure of the ancient town.
A boat-shaped street has been created in what was a passageway for fire control work. The street is now an expo park for intangible cultural heritage. Here tourists can buy products related to intangible cultural heritage or try their hand at making their own.
According to Ren there are around 150 heritage items of both national- and provincial-level in the park, including oil-paper umbrellas from Luzhou, Sichuan province; woodcarvings from Dongyang, Zhejiang province; and kites from Weifang, Shandong province.
"We plan to introduce 1,000 items of intangible cultural heritage," says Wang Zhaohai, deputy director of the management committee of the town.
At the head of the boat-shaped street stands China's first museum of shop signs. With the help of the State Administration of Industry and Commerce, the museum showcases more than 500 shop signs ranging from the Ming Dynasty through to the Republic of China period. Visitors can also hear 60 calls used by shop owners to attract the attention of customers.
Since the town opened as a tourist site, visitor numbers have been increasing, reaching 3 million last year.
Experts on cultural relics credit Tai'erzhuang with having spectacular canal legacies, such as sluices and wharfs, which are considered important for a recent application for the Grand Canal to be added to the UN world cultural heritage list.
Zaozhuang also plans to follow the suit of Warsaw in Poland by applying for world cultural heritage listing as Tai'erzhuang is recreated on a World War II site, as was Warsaw.
Shan Jixiang praised Tai'erzhuang when he was head of the State Administration of Cultural Heritage as a pioneer work in protecting cultural heritage. He said the town is a perfect combination of tangible landscape and intangible culture.
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