China to refurbish homeplace of Shaolin kung fu
       
       China        plans to give a large-scale facelift to the Shaolin        Temple area in central Henan Province, where the        renowned Shaolin kung fu (martial art) originated.
China        plans to give a large-scale facelift to the Shaolin        Temple area in central Henan Province, where the        renowned Shaolin kung fu (martial art) originated.
      
      More than 1,000 enterprises, martial art schools, shops        and households covering some 300,000 square meters are        scheduled to be moved away from eight sightseeing areas        in the city of Dengfeng, Henan, according to Jin Yindong,        head of the city's cultural heritage administration.
      
      Archeological experts will also repair and renovate the        dagobas of the 1,500-year-old Shaolin Temple in the        city.
      
      The project, set to be completed by the end of this        year, is aimed at clearing away constructions that        diminish the image of the eight ancient cultural        heritage areas.
      
      Three of them, including the Shaolin dagobas and        Songyang Academy -- one of the four most important        schools in ancient China, are vying for the World        Heritage status.
      
      The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural        Organization has granted the status to 35 sites in        China, including the Great Wall, the Forbidden City in        Beijing, the 2,200-year-old terracotta warriors in the        northwestern city of Xi'an, and the newly-added Diaolou        watchtowers in Guangdong Province.
      
      Local authorities are busy preparing a detailed plan of        the project and compensation measures for the businesses        and people to be relocated.
      
      Dengfeng, China's best-known home of martial arts, also        boasts 16 cultural relics under the state protection        list.
 
 
