National
Tea Museum is situated in the Longjing (Dragon Well) Tea
plantation near West Lake in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province.
The building complex in "Jiang Nan water-town"
is a perfect example of ancient Chinese civilian architecture.
The museum was first built in 1987 and opened to public
in April 1991, occupying a total construction area of
3500 square meters (less than one acre).
National
Tea Museum is the only state-level museum specialized
in the theme of tea culture. It is also the largest tea
museum in China with the most comprehensive collection
of tea utensils and other relative exhibits on view. The
museum is made up of five themed buildings: exhibition,
tea drinking, tea performance, multiple functions, and
international exchanges. The exhibition hall is the main
body of the museum. Branching off it are areas dedicated
to the history of Chinese tea, tea drinking customs, tea
utensils used in past dynasties, and the knowledge surrounding
tea culture, and even the complicated process of picking
and roasting tea leaf.
The
two locations dedicated to tea drinking and tea performance
are designed to introduce the ways of drinking tea and
show the diverse tea-related performances in different
regions of the world. The two are also considered the
denotation and supplement for tea culture.
Visitors here not only appreciate but also take part in
the tea-drinking ceremony. Guests can choose their own
particular tea, for example the Chinese Longjing tea named
as the imperial tea by the Emperor Qianlong during the
Qing Dynasty (1644-1911).
The
multiple function rooms generally hold international seminars
and exchanges on any sort of tea culture. That is to say,
National Tea Museum would rather be an international-level
research center on tea and tea-related culture than just
a museum showing the history of tea. Each year, tea professionals
and aficionados come to Hangzhou city from all over the
world for the "West Lake International Tea Festival".
Tea, as the symbol of world peace and friendship, connects
people from all over the world.
National
Tea Museum plays an important role on the tea stage and
offers the chance and space for international research
and exchange about tea and tea culture. So far, the museum
has been a hot tourist spot and an educational base that
attracts millions of people from both home and abroad.
Undoubtedly, National Tea Museum will help begin a new
era in tea development.
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