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After the founding of Pudu Temple
Pudu Temple 1984 was designated as the key cultural relics protection unit in Beijing. Due to historical reasons, after the founding of the People's Republic of China, Pudu Temple naturally formed a high-density residential area, and the main hall of Pudu Temple became a classroom and warehouse of the school. Pudu Temple was seriously damaged, and the surrounding halls no longer existed. The renovation of Pudu Temple has attracted the attention of many departments and people, and it has been included in the "330 million yuan cultural relics emergency repair project" in Beijing for three years. Dongcheng District has invested more than 40 million yuan to relocate 186 households on the platform of Pudu Temple, merge the Wang Hongbin primary school that occupies the main hall of Pudu Temple, and demolish nearly 5,000 square meters of dilapidated houses and illegal buildings around Pudu Temple, completely vacating cultural relics and carrying out repairs.

After the retreat, the renovation of Pudu Temple was completely carried out in accordance with the traditional crafts of ancient buildings and the principle of keeping the cultural relics as old as before. The painted dome in the temple looks half new and half old, because the old building components should be used first in maintenance, and only when the old ones are defective and the number is not enough can they be replaced with imitation new ones.

On May 16, 2007, Beijing Tax Museum, the first provincial tax museum in China, officially announced its opening to the public, and it will be open to the whole society free of charge in the future. The Tax Museum is located in Purdue Temple, which was once the residence of Prince Dourgen of Qing Dynasty. There are two special exhibitions in the museum: the tax bill exhibition of Ming and Qing Dynasties and the tax stamp exhibition. From the perspective of showing the historical integrity of taxation, the exhibition includes cultural relics such as memorials and tax rules, which reflects the characteristics of the tax culture of the imperial city.

High-tech means are also used in the exhibition hall, which reproduces the virtual scene of Chongwenmen tax in the commercial street in the past. In addition, the exhibition hall also compares the scene of Madian Tax Office in 1950s with the tax office in this century, and shows the growth process of Beijing tax since the founding of New China.