Furong Street Guandi Temple is located at No. 38 East of the middle section of Furong Street, Lixia District, Jinan City, Shandong Province, China. It is facing east and west, facing the provincial capital East Street. The temple was built in the middle of the Qing Dynasty. The building is composed of a private house-style temple gate, three main halls and newly built north-south wing houses. The temple gate is a hard mountain top and the main hall is a roll-shed roof. It was opened to the public after renovation from March to December 2009. In the temple, there are also inscriptions such as Qing Kangxi 59 (1720) "Re-establishment of the Peng Stele of the Guangxu 25 (1899)" "Re-renovation of Furong Street North First Buzhengsi Xiaojie Road Dongguan Di Shengjun Temple Stele of the Zhengsi". Although the temple is not big, it is located in the rush, and the incense has been very strong for a while. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, there were hundreds of Guandi Temples in Jinan. The gods sacrificed by Guan Temple were the general Guan Yu Guan Yunchang, commonly known as Guan Gong. From Wei to Tang, Guan Yu's influence in the folk was not great, and the Song Dynasty fell, and Fang Shengwei was a big earthquake. Buddhist Taoist Confucianism scrambled to pull him into the church as a law protector, becoming a "wu sage" that no one knew, and suddenly fought with Confucius, the Confucian Temple called the Confucian Temple, and the Guan Temple called the Wu Temple. Furong Street Guandi Temple is not far north is the Song Dynasty founded Fuxue Confucian Temple, which constitutes what people call the "left Wenyou Wu" pattern.