Beijing Museum of Stone Carving Art (1) is located at No. 24, Wuta Temple Village, Baishiqiao, outside Xizhimen, Haidian District. It is a special museum displaying stone carvings in Beijing. The Museum covers an area of 20,000 square meters and belongs to the Beijing Municipal Administration of Cultural Relics. Wuta Temple, originally known as Zhenjue Temple, was built in Yongle Middle of the Ming Dynasty (1403-1424), destroyed in the late Qing Dynasty, and now only the King Kong Pagoda exists. The open-air exhibition of the Stone Carving Museum is divided into eight residential areas according to its contents and functions. There are more than 500 kinds of stone carvings on display in past dynasties, and more than 1000 kinds of stone carvings in storage. Among them are the earliest existing stone inscriptions in Beijing area "Shendao of Qin Jun in Youzhou Shuzuo of the Han Dynasty" pillars and stone imperial components; precious statues of the Northern Dynasty, epitaphs of the Tang and Ming Dynasties, gold and Yuan Stone carvings, stone enjoyment of the Qing Dynasty, calligraphy stickers and famous calligraphers. The exhibition of the history of stone carvings shows the development history of stone carvings culture from the primitive society to the Ming and Qing Dynasties, and reproduces human civilization.