Chaonei No. 81
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chaonei_No._81 an entity of type: Thing
Chaonei No. 81 (simplified Chinese: 朝内81号; traditional Chinese: 朝內81號; pinyin: Cháo nèi bāshí yī hào, short for simplified Chinese: 朝阳门内大街81号; traditional Chinese: 朝陽門內大街81號; pinyin: Chāoyáng mén nèi dàjiē bāshí yī hào or Chaoyangmen Inner Street No. 81), sometimes referred to as Chaonei Church, is a house located in the Chaoyangmen neighborhood of the Dongcheng District in Beijing, China. It is a brick structure in the French Baroque architectural style built in the early 20th century, with a larger outbuilding. The municipality of Beijing has designated it a historic building.
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Chaonei No. 81
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Chaonei No. 81
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Chaonei No. 81
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39.92354965209961
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116.4232864379883
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44093613
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1063282067
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81
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right
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Side of the house with a stone bay window on the ground floor left, a tripartite French door on the right and an elliptical one in the middle of the upper story. Cars are parked in front.
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Rear side of house, wider and with most windows missing.
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Chaonei Church, No. 81
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House
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East elevation
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South elevation
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West elevation of main house in 2014
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1910
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vertical
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Street address
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3
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Other sides of the house
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center
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Rear elevation of 81 Chaonei, Beijing.jpg
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South profile, 81 Chaonei, Beijing.jpg
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A three-story brick building with a balcony supported by stone pillars over the main entrance and stone trim generally. The upper story is a mansard roof pierced by dormer windows with round-arched roofs. Some of its windows are shattered and it appears abandoned, but a small maroon car is parked at the lower left and utility wires enter the building through the central window on the upper story
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300
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Chaoyangmen neighborhood, Dongcheng District
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China
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Brick, stone
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朝内81号
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zh
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Cháo nèi bāshí yī hào
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Chāoyáng mén nèi dàjiē bāshí yī hào
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Jing Cheng 81 Hao
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朝内81号
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朝阳门内大街81号
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Vacant
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京城81號
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朝內81號
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朝陽門內大街81號
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300
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39.92355 116.42329
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Chaonei No. 81 (simplified Chinese: 朝内81号; traditional Chinese: 朝內81號; pinyin: Cháo nèi bāshí yī hào, short for simplified Chinese: 朝阳门内大街81号; traditional Chinese: 朝陽門內大街81號; pinyin: Chāoyáng mén nèi dàjiē bāshí yī hào or Chaoyangmen Inner Street No. 81), sometimes referred to as Chaonei Church, is a house located in the Chaoyangmen neighborhood of the Dongcheng District in Beijing, China. It is a brick structure in the French Baroque architectural style built in the early 20th century, with a larger outbuilding. The municipality of Beijing has designated it a historic building. It is best known for the widespread belief that it is haunted, and it has been described as "Beijing's most celebrated 'haunted house'". Stories associated with the house include ghosts, usually of a suicidal woman, and mysterious disappearances. It has become a popular site for urban exploration by Chinese youth, especially after a popular 2014 3D horror film, The House That Never Dies, was set there. Due to incomplete historical records, there is disagreement about who built the house and for what purpose; however it is accepted that, contrary to one frequently cited legend, the house was never the property of a Kuomintang officer who left a woman, either his wife or a mistress, behind there when he fled to Taiwan in 1949. Since the establishment of the People's Republic of China (PRC) that year, records are more consistent. It was used as offices for various government agencies for most of the PRC's early years. During the Cultural Revolution, in the late 1960s, it was briefly occupied by the Red Guards; their hasty departure from the property has been cited as further evidence of the haunting. It is currently owned by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Beijing, which in the late 1990s raised the possibility that it might one day serve as the Vatican embassy as a reason for not demolishing it. The building has been restored from March 2016, and it is opened for renting since 2017. The rent of the building may be estimated to around 10 million RMB per year.
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32039
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(朝阳内大街81号)
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81 Chaoyangmen Inner Street
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Chaonei Church, No. 81
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1910
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3
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朝内81号
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Vacant
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