
Stake attention in this memory
An outdoor, slightly tilted photograph captures a brick wall adorned with two prominent signs and a wall-mounted lantern, likely depicting a historical site in Guang Zhou Shi, China. At the top, a dark brown rectangular wooden sign features elegant golden Chinese characters, reading "風辔粵韻繞西關" (Feng Pei Yue Yun Rao Xi Guan), with smaller characters "桃農林杰去" below. Below the wooden sign, a clear acrylic or plexiglass information plaque is mounted to the gray brick wall. The plaque provides bilingual text in both Chinese and English. The Chinese title, "祖居 李小龍," translates to "Bruce Lee Ancestor's House," which is also present in English text. The English description details that the house, located at No.13, Yongqing Lane 1, Enning Road, was built in 1944 by Bruce Lee's father, Lee Hoi-Chuen. It is described as a "3 halls two-story building" with a Xiguan mansion architectural style, originally covering an area of over 200 square meters. The plaque further explains its history, including Lee Hoi-Chuen living there, the property's rental status during the Cultural Revolution, and its eventual retrieval by descendants. It notes that while the main structure remains, interior decorative components are gone due to reconstruction, and the house was rebuilt in 2005. A black, industrial-style wall-mounted lantern with a clear glass enclosure is visible in the bottom left, affixed to the brickwork. The wall itself consists of uniformly sized gray bricks with light-colored mortar. The scene is brightly lit, suggesting daytime.
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