In 2007, Hengdian World Studios, the world's largest outdoor film studio, announced it planned to build a multi-billion-dollar replica of Beijing's Old Summer Palace at its headquarters some 1,500 kilometres south of the Chinese capital.
The 18th-century original in Beijing's northwest served as a retreat for China's emperors, with lavish gardens, fountains and pavilions, but was pillaged by British and French troops in 1860 during the Second Opium War.
Parts of the new version are finally scheduled to open next month, but the project has been sharply criticised by the stewards of the former imperial complex, who said that the 400-hectare (990-acre) site is "unique and cannot be replicated".
"The construction and development of the site should be planned by authoritative national organisations, and any replication of it should reach certain standards," the palace's administrative office told China's official Xinhua news agency today.
Hengdian founder Xu Wenrong defended the project, telling the agency that it was an effort to educate China's younger generation about China's past rather than simply build a reproduction of the site.
Hengdian World Studios has already built a full-scale replica of Beijing's Forbidden City. Yet the Old Summer Palace, or Yuanmingyuan, project has attracted controversy due to its place in Chinese history.
The destruction was in response to China's capture, torture and killing of members of a British and French delegation.
Beijing has waged a persistent campaign to retrieve 1.5 million relics it estimates were taken from the imperial complex at the time.
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