China Naming Network - Eight-character Q&A - China's poorest rich man, why is his house shabby and worth hundreds of millions, but he doesn't necessarily have money?

China's poorest rich man, why is his house shabby and worth hundreds of millions, but he doesn't necessarily have money?

Take Beijing Siheyuan as an example. As we all know, the quadrangle is an ancient building. The seemingly "dilapidated" old house has a house price of hundreds of millions. We can do the following analysis:

In addition to the land price in Beijing, there are very few serious quadrangles that Beijing can trade. Moreover, those good quadrangles have a history of inheritance, and they have basically lived in historical celebrities, and they are also in the prime location of the main city of Beijing. Having a quadrangle in the main urban area of Beijing is already a status symbol. So it makes sense that the house price is expensive.

There are also reasons for the formation of history. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties and even the Republic of China, the basic layout of old Beijing houses was a chessboard layout dominated by quadrangles. Dignitaries, wealthy businessmen and ordinary people all live in quadrangles, but on different scales.

Moreover, the Forbidden City, which is famous at home and abroad, is also a typical quadrangle building. The overall building of the Forbidden City, with the north-south line, pays attention to east-west symmetry on the central axis of Beijing, and has a vestibule and a backyard. The plane pattern adopts the architectural form of "founder layout method".

There is a saying in Qing dynasty that describes quadrangles: "ceiling, fish tank, pomegranate tree, old man, Liu Li, fat girl". It can be said that it is a typical portrayal of quadrangle life.

Beijing quadrangle is a status symbol. People used to live in quadrangles, but now quadrangles are a symbol of money. More and more modern wealthy businessmen want to buy a quadrangle, where they can have a cordial exchange with their families and enjoy themselves.

The quadrangle in Beijing is famous far and near because it bears the customs of old Beijing and is a super-high architectural art.

Courtyard buildings are the best in positioning, scale, material selection and materials. It follows the geomantic theory, that is, "the unity of man and nature", and is full of strong cultural atmosphere. Good quadrangles in Beijing pay attention to the shape of the house. In the renovation of Beijing quadrangles, a meaning has been achieved. The pattern is meaningful and the meaning must be auspicious. To sum up, we can see that it is reasonable for those seemingly "shabby" old houses to be sold at "sky-high price".