A curved roof with overhanging eaves which a wooden skeleton supports.
Types of roofs in traditional chinese architecture.
A traditional chinese roof with 8 facades which could be either single or double eaves.
Double eave hip roofs were the classiest roofs in the empire reserved for the top imperial buildings.
The roofs in both of the above photos show what liang ssu ch eng in chinese architecture called the immediately outstanding feature of chinese architecture.
The roof shape of the forbidden city s most important buildings also had significance.
This type of roof allows the structure with three facades normally used on a small garden pavilion.
They provided good protection against fire stayed waterproof and were good for drainage.
The stele pavilion gives a roof to a stone tablet to protect the engraved record of an important event.
Tiles were the most common material used for ancient chinese roofs.
Read more on traditional chinese roof architecture.
3 suspended roof xuanshan roof see the 3rd picture.
This is strikingly different from most western roofing systems they put a lot of stress on the outer walls.
Hip hipped roof wudian roof see the 1st picture below hipped roof is of the highest level in traditional chinese.
Pavilions also stand by bridges or over water wells.
Traditional chinese roofs on garden structures round roof.
In the latter case dormer windows are built to allow the sun to cast its rays into the well as it has been the belief that water untouched by the sun would cause disease.
Residential buildings weren t allowed yellow glazed tiles which were reserved for use on royal buildings.
There is no evidence of the dome in chinese architecture unnecessary in any case with wooden structures although stone and brick tombs of various periods do have arched doorways and vaulted or corbelled roofs.