Introduction to the Three-Way Teahouse: The One-way Teahouse was built in the late Ming Dynasty. It is a group of courtyard-style Buddhist buildings with a mountain gate in the north, a main hall in the south, and Zen rooms on the east and west sides. The main hall of a tea shed is a three-bay mountain-style building, in which the three great Bodhisattvas Avalokitesvara, Manjusri and Samantabhadra are enshrined.
The Erdao Teahouse was built in the middle of the Ming Dynasty and is the first Taoist temple seen on the way to the mountain. It is built in a gentle area on the mountainside. The three main halls are hard-mountain-style buildings facing south; the three roll-roofed buildings on the east side are alchemy rooms, which were the living and retreat places for Taoist priests in ancient times; the beam-and-column buildings on the west side are It is a veranda, a pavilion for tourists to enjoy the scenery and rest and enjoy the cool air.
Sandao Tea House was built in the late Ming Dynasty as a Buddhist temple. There are three Zen rooms on the east side, and the main hall on the north is a hard mountain-style building with a gray roof. Enshrined in the hall is Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva with Thousand Arms and Thousand Eyes, flanked by Shancai and the Dragon Girl.