Every weekend, Yang Jie spends at least a morning at a book house by the 6,300 km-long Yangtze River, reading while enjoying a cup of coffee. The book house that Yang Jie often visits (call) Pipa Pavilion, inspired by a famous poem Pipa Xing. Shaped like pipa from a bird's eye view, Pipa Pavilion (stand) as a cultural landmark in the Jiujiang section of the Yangtze River National Cultural Park.
Pipa Pavilion offers more than 5,000 books free reading, as well as a coffee shop and a tearoom. These (facility) are part of the Yangtze River National Cultural Park, which aims to pass on the cultural history of Yangtze River, the (long) and most iconic river in China.
Similarly, China is building cultural parks centered around the Great Wall, the Grand Canal, the Long March and the Yellow River, all of are defining symbols of Chinese culture. By (set) up these parks, China proudly displays (it) diverse culture. More importantly, it shows how cultural and (environment) protection coexist in harmony, offering a sustainable legacy (遗产) for generations to come.