China to close scenic peak on tourist attraction
Huangshan restricted from visitors for three years for maintenance
![]() Catherine Tsai / AP A sunset is seen over Huangshan — or Yellow Mountain, in southeast China. Huangshan in Anhui province, with its distinctive pines and rolling clouds, has some of the most beautiful scenery in the area. |
|
Slideshow |
Welcome to Martha’s Vineyard President Barack Obama and his family will visit Martha's Vineyard during the last week of August. Take a visual tour of some of the island’s better-known draws. more photos |
Slideshow |
Perfectly Paris A magical city known as the ‘City of Love’ and the ‘City of Light’, Paris is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world. more photos |
Slideshow |
Wonders of Nature These 28 spectacular natural landmarks will be considered and voted for – or against – and come 2011, only a handful will be designated the “New 7 Wonders of Nature.” more photos |
Big changes in store for Oprah? Nov. 8: Is the queen of daytime television preparing to give up her popular talk show to focus on her own cable network? NBC’s Kevin Tibbles reports, then Rolling Stone contributor Toure and CNBC’s Carmen Wong Ulrich join Jenna Wolfe to discuss the financial and cultural impact of a potential move. |
BEIJING - Chinese tourism authorities have closed one of the peaks on popular tourist attraction Huangshan mountain for three years to allow vegetation to recover from the hordes of tourists who visit the UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The barring of visitors to Danxia Feng, or "Purple Cloud Peak," is part of a revolving series of closures of sites on the mountain, located in Anhui province, about 745 miles south of the Chinese capital, Beijing.
Another of the mountain's scenic spots, Shixin Peak, reopened to tourists on July 1 after authorities restored trees and shrubs. The official China Daily newspaper called the closure the "latest move to protect one of China's World Heritage Sites."
Famed for stunning scenery that has inspired countless landscape paintings, Huangshan, or "Yellow Mountain," attracts millions of visitors each year who clamber up thousands of steps. The area boasts 72 named peaks within a 59-square-mile area, with the three highest rising above 5,905 feet.
China has among UNESCO's largest number of listed sites, although their management has sometimes come under criticism. UNESCO this year expressed concern over development at Tibet's Potala palace and five other Chinese sites.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM TRAVEL |
| Add Travel headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide





