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Temple of Earth

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Quiet, geometric, and deeply atmospheric, Temple of Earth is the Ming-era earth altar inside Temple of Earth Park, just north of Beijing's Second Ring Road. Its square Fangze Altar, red walls, and ancient cypresses show the old idea of earth as square in a calmer key than Temple of Heaven.

For a first visit, buy the low-cost park ticket and add the inner Huangqi Chamber ticket if you want the ritual core; this keeps the stop flexible and good value.
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6 tips for visiting the Temple of Earth

1
Start with the altar core
If the Temple of Earth is your goal, go first to the Fangze Altar and the nearby ritual buildings before drifting into the wider park. The red walls and square stone geometry make more sense when you see them before the tree avenues. That way the visit feels like a historic site, not just a pleasant walk.
2
Choose the right ticket mix
If you mainly want park atmosphere, the basic Ditan ticket may be enough. If ritual architecture is your reason for coming, add the inner Huangqi Chamber area at the gate. This small choice keeps costs low while making sure you do not miss the part you came to see.
3
Use Yonghegong for the south side
If you plan to continue to Yonghegong Lama Temple, Imperial College, or Confucius Temple, arrive via Yonghegong Lama Temple Station and the south side. If your next stop is Bell Tower or Drum Tower, use the west gate near Andingmen. Picking the gate around your next move saves dead walking.
4
Watch fair-season changes
During the Spring Festival temple fair, the Temple of Earth area becomes a festival ground with separate hours, ticketing, crowds, and occasional setup or takedown closures. If you want quiet ritual space, avoid that window. If you want Beijing New Year energy, embrace it and give yourself more time.
5
Give the trees quiet time
If you visit in early November, leave space after the altar for the ginkgo and maple color in Ditan Park. The old trees soften the strict geometry, especially when the paths are not packed with event crowds. It turns a quick monument stop into a much calmer memory.
6
Pair one north-city cluster
For a compact heritage half-day, choose one direction: the Yonghegong Lama Temple, Imperial College, and Confucius Temple cluster, or the westward route toward Bell Tower and Drum Tower. Trying both makes Ditan feel like filler. One clean route lets the altar keep its atmosphere.

How to plan a Temple of Earth visit inside Ditan Park

Temple of Earth is easy to underrate because the practical visit starts like a normal park entry. The better plan is to treat it as a compact ritual site first, then let the wider Ditan landscape slow the day down.

Enter for the altar, then widen out

Best for first-time visitors: go straight to the Fangze Altar before the park paths distract you. The two-level square platform, red walls, and ordered courtyards explain why this corner of Dongcheng mattered to Ming and Qing emperors. Once you have that frame, the old trees and wider paths feel like a pause rather than a detour.

Choose the ticket mix before you drift

Choose the basic park ticket if you want atmosphere, a short heritage stop, and a low-cost north-Beijing break. Add the Huangqi Chamber / inner ceremonial area if you want the sacred focus of the complex, not just the outer mood. This is the one ticket decision that changes what you actually understand on site.

Let the next stop choose your gate

The Temple of Earth visit is calmer when the exit already makes sense. Use the south side for Yonghegong Lama Temple, Imperial College, and Confucius Temple; use the west side if you are walking toward Bell Tower and Drum Tower. This is not glamorous planning, but it keeps the day from turning into a loop of avoidable pavement.

Treat event days as a different visit

During the Spring Festival temple fair or the September book fair, Ditan changes character. The same altar sits inside the park, but crowds, stages, food stalls, book stands, and temporary schedules take over the rhythm. Choose event days for local energy; choose ordinary weekdays when you want the square altar and old cypresses to do the talking.

Ritual architecture of the Temple of Earth

The power of Temple of Earth is quieter than its name suggests. It is not about height or spectacle; it is about square form, axial order, and the feeling that every wall and platform was built to hold a ceremony in place.

1530 and the square earth

The altar was founded in 1530 under the Jiajing Emperor, when imperial Beijing organized ritual space with astonishing precision. Here, the old cosmological phrase that heaven is round and earth is square becomes stone, walls, and walking routes. That is why the site feels grounded, almost deliberately horizontal, beside the more famous skyward drama of Temple of Heaven.

Fangze Altar holds the center

The Fangze Altar is the site's center of gravity. Its broad square plan looks simple at first, then the proportions start to work on you: low stone, contained space, and a ritual emptiness that still feels intentional. Stand there before you chase smaller details, because the altar is the sentence the whole complex is built around.

Huangqi Chamber adds sacred focus

The Huangqi Chamber is the ticketed inner focus for visitors who want more than the park outline. It helps connect the empty altar platform with the devotional purpose of the place, where imperial rites were performed for the Earth deity. If you are history-focused, this is the add-on that gives the visit more depth.

Old trees soften the geometry

The wider park has ancient trees around the altar, with official sources counting 168 old trees and many more seasonal ginkgo and maple trees across Ditan. This matters because the site could otherwise feel severe. The cypresses, yellow leaves, and slow local park life make the imperial geometry feel lived in rather than sealed off.

Temple of Earth in a north Beijing day

Temple of Earth is not a blockbuster stop, and that is part of its value. It works best when you use it to shape a calmer north-Beijing route around temples, learning, old lanes, and a slower park rhythm.

A compact route with Yonghegong and Guozijian

Great for first-time visitors who want one coherent north-city theme. Start or end at Temple of Earth, then connect the south side with Yonghegong Lama Temple, Imperial College, and Confucius Temple. The Buddhist temple, imperial academy, Confucian temple, and earth altar sit close enough to explain one another without making the day feel scattered.

A westward walk to the Bell and Drum towers

Choose this if you prefer old-city atmosphere over another temple complex. Exit near Andingmen, then continue toward Bell Tower and Drum Tower for a route that shifts from imperial ritual to lanes, courtyards, and city timekeeping. It is especially good for repeat visitors who want Beijing to feel less like a checklist.

Who gets the most from this stop

History-focused travelers get the clearest payoff, especially if they compare earth-square symbolism here with Temple of Heaven. Families benefit when they keep the visit short and pair it with only one nearby cluster. Literary-minded visitors may also enjoy the Shi Tiesheng association around Ditan, where a quiet park can feel more powerful than a louder monument.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Temple of Earth the same as Ditan Park?

Not exactly. Temple of Earth refers to the historic earth-worship altar and ritual core, while Temple of Earth Park is the wider park around it. For most visitors, they are experienced together, but the altar gives the place its historic meaning.
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How long should I plan for Temple of Earth?

Plan about 1 to 2 hours if you mainly want the altar, Huangqi Chamber, and nearby ritual buildings. If you also want the wider park, old trees, and photos, 1.5 to 3 hours feels more comfortable.
Read more.

Do I need a separate ticket for the inner area?

Usually yes if you want the inner ceremonial area. As checked in April 2026, the park ticket is listed at CNY 2, while the Huangqi Chamber / inner ceremonial area is listed at CNY 5 per person.
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When is the best time to visit?

For calm, choose a non-event weekday morning. For color, early November is strongest, when the ginkgo and maple trees in Ditan Park peak. Avoid Spring Festival fair dates if you want a quiet altar visit.
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What should I see first inside Temple of Earth?

Start with the square Fangze Altar, then continue to the Huangqi Chamber and nearby ritual buildings such as Zhaigong. After that, let the park paths and old cypresses slow the visit down.
Read more.

How does it compare with Temple of Heaven?

Temple of Heaven is bigger, busier, and more theatrical. Temple of Earth is flatter, quieter, and built around square-earth symbolism. It works as a thoughtful complement, not a replacement.
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Can I pair it with Yonghegong and Guozijian?

Yes. The cleanest nearby cluster is Yonghegong Lama Temple, Imperial College, and Confucius Temple, all south of the park. Use the south side of Ditan for that plan, and keep the route to one half-day theme.
Read more.

Is Temple of Earth suitable for limited-mobility visitors?

It can be, especially on the main park paths, which are listed as barrier-free. The main planning issue is distance between gates and zones, so choose your entrance carefully and avoid crowded festival periods.
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General information

opening hours

As checked in April 2026, the wider Temple of Earth Park is listed daily from 6:00 am to 9:30 pm from May 1 to October 31 and from 6:00 am to 8:30 pm from November 1 to April 30.

Historic rooms and event periods can follow shorter schedules, so recheck close to Lunar New Year or book-fair dates.

tickets

As checked in April 2026, regular park admission for the wider Temple of Earth Park is listed at CNY 2, and the Huangqi Chamber / inner ceremonial area is listed at CNY 5 per person.

Spring Festival temple fair admission is separate; in 2026 the fair used CNY 30 adult and CNY 15 concession pricing.

address

Temple of Earth
Inside Temple of Earth Park
Andingmen Outer Street
Dongcheng District, Beijing
China

how to get there

Use Yonghegong Lama Temple Station on metro lines 2 and 5 for the south side, Andingmen Station on line 2 for the west gate, or Hepingli Beijie Station on line 5 for the north side.

Public transport is usually easier than driving, especially because the 2025 municipal park listing shows no parking spaces for Ditan Park.

accessibility

The wider Ditan Park is listed as barrier-free, and main paths suit a slower route through the altar area. If mobility is a priority, choose the gate closest to your next stop and avoid event periods, when crowds around the Fangze Altar can make the visit more tiring.
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