Aerial photo taken on Oct. 24, 2020 shows a view of the Badaling Great Wall in Beijing, capital of China. The Badaling Great Wall is a major tourist attraction for autumn views in Beijing. (Xinhua/Chen Yehua)
Northwest China's Gansu Province is preparing to initiate a conservation plan for the Great Wall, according to the Gansu Provincial Administration of Cultural Heritage.
"The conservation plan has been worked out and preparations for a national park management system to protect the Great Wall sections in Gansu are underway," Ma Yuping, director of the administration, said Sunday.
The Gansu section of the Great Wall measures 3,654 kilometers in length, ranking second in the country, with the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Great Wall ranking first in the country.
Jiayuguan Pass, located six kilometers southwest of Jiayuguan in Gansu, makes up the Great Wall's western end, which stretches to the eastern end at Shanhaiguan Pass on the shores of North China's Bohai Bay in Hebei Province.
Gansu has invested a total of 600 million yuan ($89.76 million) on more than 30 Great Wall protection projects in recent years, according to the administration.
The projects involve emergency rescue and reinforcement of the Great Wall itself as well as maintenance and repair of flood control and drainage facilities around the relic sites.
The repair and protection work of Jiayuguan Pass is the most expansive among the projects, Ma added.
Construction on Jiayuguan Pass began in 1372 and was completed in 1540. The Great Wall was listed as a World Cultural Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1987.
The Gansu section of the Great Wall for the planned national park is expected to include three exhibition gardens to display the ramming technology used in the construction of the Great Wall in Northwest China, the history of the ancient Silk Road, and the culture surrounding the Great Wall.