This video documents a remarkable architectural anomaly in Beijing where a traditional siheyuan courtyard house has twelve doors that all open to the same room, containing identical furniture, dimensions, and even the same water stain on the plaster wall. The building was originally owned by the Shen family since 1887, with the last registered occupant being Shen Yanqing (1898-1966), who reportedly did not leave the property since 1955. Architectural historian Mingzhu discovered this anomaly in 2024 while documenting the building before scheduled demolition. She filed a preservation report titled 'Custodial Continuity' arguing that the building's irreplaceable nature stems from its inexplicable configuration, which cannot be reconstructed if demolished. The demolition order was suspended within ten days, and six months later, the siheyuan was formally designated a protected heritage structure under category B of the municipal heritage classification.
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Every Room in This Beijing House Is Identical. I Found Out Why in the 12th Room | Chinese Horror!Added:
A surveyor entered a courtyard house in Beijing in 1967 and found 12 rooms that were identical. Same dimensions, same water stain, same ceramic lamp. He wrote a one-line note at the bottom of his report, "Recommend do not demolish." He did not explain why. 57 years later, an architectural historian named Mingju arrived at the same courtyard to document it before partial demolition.
She opened the first door, a bare room, a low table, a folded cloth. She opened the second door, the same room. She opened all 12, everyone the same room.
The building has four walls, four wings, 12 separate doors. Architecturally, this is not possible, but Mingju is not superstitious. She is thorough.
And what she uncovered about the woman who lived inside this courtyard for 11 years without leaving, about the year the rooms rearranged themselves after her death, and about what happened when Mingju sat down in that room and said her name out loud, changed the building's status from scheduled for demolition to protected heritage structure.
This is her report. Everything in it is exactly as she filed it.
The hutong was quieter than she expected for a weekday afternoon. Mingju had taken the subway to Dongcheng and walked the last 10 minutes with her bag over one shoulder and her camera around her neck, navigating by the map on her phone through lanes so narrow that the gray stone walls on either side were almost close enough to touch at once. The last stretch before the courtyard's gate was empty of people, just two bicycles chained to a pipe, a cat on a window sill, the smell of coal dust, and something frying from a building further down. The gate was wooden, faded red, its iron fittings orange with rust. It was unlocked as the district office had told her it would be. She pushed it open and stepped inside. The Siheyuan opened up around her. A square courtyard, maybe 15 m across, paved in old gray brick. A Paulownia tree at its center, bare branched in the late autumn cold. Four wings enclosed it on all sides, each with three doors set at even intervals.
The roof lines curving slightly at the eaves in the style of northern courtyard houses. The northern wing was slightly taller than the others. The western showed fire damage along its eaves. Old damage, decades old. The blackened wood soaked in and settled into the building's general weathering. The light was going. She had an hour, maybe less, before she would lose the natural light she needed for accurate documentation.
She set down her bag near the Paulownia tree and checked the camera settings, then opened her notebook to the survey template she had prepared on the train.
Each room numbered, columns for condition, dimensions, notable features, photographic references.
She was methodical by training and by preference.
12 rooms in a standard four-wing configuration. She would work clockwise, starting with the eastern wing. The first door was on the far right of the eastern wing. She turned the handle, old brass, worn smooth, and pushed it open.
The room inside was bare and dim. A low wooden table at the center, approximately knee-height, the kind used for writing or for setting out food during a meal. On the table, a square of folded cloth, white or pale gray. She couldn't be certain in the low light.
Near the table, on the floor, a ceramic lamp, round-bodied, dark glaze, the wick holder empty. No oil, no flame, just the object placed with the deliberateness of something positioned and not moved since. She photographed it from the doorway first, wide shot, then medium.
Stepped inside, three paces for the detail shots. The room smelled of old wood and cold air and something faintly mineral that she associated with buildings that had been closed up for a long time. She noted the dimensions, approximately 4 by 4 m, and a water stain on the plaster in the upper left corner, arching slightly. The shape of old damp. She noted it in her book, photographed the stain [music] specifically, and moved on. The second door was in the western wing, directly across the courtyard. She crossed the open paving, her footsteps loud on the old brick, and turned that handle. She stopped in the doorway. The room was the same room, not similar, the same. The same dimensions, the same bare floor, the same low table at the center with the folded cloth on top of it, the same ceramic lamp in the same position relative to the table, and in the upper left corner of the plaster wall, the same water stain, the same arc, the same faint shadow of old damp. Ming stood in the doorway and looked at it for a long moment. She was a careful person. She did not rush to conclusions.
She went back across the courtyard to the eastern wing door and looked at those photographs on her camera screen, then came back to the western wing doorway and looked at the room again with fresh eyes. The low table, the folded cloths, the ceramic lamp, the stain. She could not account for it by any logic of the building's construction that she knew. She opened her notebook and wrote one line under the second room's entry, "identical to room one in all observed particulars." Then she went to open the third door. She opened the third door, the same room. She stood in the doorway for a moment, then took her photographs without entering. Then the fourth door, same room. She did not write anything in her notebook between the third and fourth.
She just photographed and moved to the next. By the sixth door, she had stopped being surprised in the way that produced a physical response. The sharp intake of breath, the pause, the checking and rechecking. She had moved into something quieter and more focused, the state she sometimes entered when a building refused to behave according to its own apparent logic and she had to stop applying what she knew and simply record what was there. She worked through the remaining six doors with the same care she had brought to the first two. Every handle turned, every room photo- graphed from the doorway and then from inside.
[music] The same dimensions each time, measured with the laser measure she carried in her bag. 4.1 m by 4.1 m. The same floor, bare gray stone. The same table, positioned 1/3 of the way from the north wall. The same folded cloth on the table. The same ceramic lamp on the floor to the table's right. And in every room, in the upper left corner of the plaster wall, the same water stain, the same arc, the same faint shadow of old damp that had come from somewhere above at some point and been absorbed into the building's long memory. By the time she closed the 12th door, the courtyard was fully dark. The paulownia tree was a silhouette against the Beijing winter sky, which was never truly dark this close to the city center. Just a low, amber-tinged gray. She stood in the middle of the paving and looked at the four wings around her. All 12 closed doors in a row and did not move for a while. She went back to her hotel and set up her laptop on the desk and transferred all the photographs from the day's work.
She opened them in a grid. 12 entrance shots, 12 interior shots, 24 photographs total. She arranged the 12 interior shots in a 3x4 grid on her screen and sat back and looked at them. They were the same photograph, not similar, not taken of similar rooms with similar furnishings and similar dimensions. The same photograph reproduced 12 times across 12 different doors in four different wings of a building whose exterior configuration made it physically impossible for every room to be the same room. She zoomed in on the water stain in each image in sequence.
Same arc, [music] same spread. She zoomed in on the fold pattern of the cloth on the table. Same fold, same crease lines. She zoomed in on the ceramic lamp and looked at the glaze pattern on its shoulder.
A slight irregularity in the dark surface that could only have come from the kiln, from the specific heat distribution of a single firing of a single object, the same lamp, in every photograph, photographed from 12 different doorways. Mingju sat at the desk for a long time without writing anything. She was an architectural historian.
She had worked with buildings for 17 years. She had documented houses where rooms had been subdivided, and the divisions had confused surveyors for decades. Houses where renovations had created spatial impossibilities that took days to resolve. Buildings where plans and reality disagreed so fundamentally that she had begun to distrust both. She had a high tolerance for buildings that behaved strangely.
This was not a building behaving strangely. This was a building operating according to a logic she had never encountered and could not account for with anything in her professional knowledge. She opened a new document on her laptop and began writing field notes, starting from the first door. She wrote carefully and without interpretation, only what she had measured and photographed and observed.
She wrote for 40 minutes.
When she finished, she had five pages of notes and no explanation. She saved the document and closed it and sat in the hotel room in the quiet of a Beijing winter night and thought about 12 doors and one room and a building that was scheduled to be partly demolished in 6 weeks. Then she opened the municipal land records database and began searching for the history of the Shen family Xiheyuan.
The municipal land records database was not designed for late-night searching.
The interface was slow, the scanned documents inconsistently legible, the indexing built around administrative categories that did not always map cleanly onto the questions a historian would ask. Ming-ju had used it before on previous Beijing projects and had learned to be patient with it, to search broadly first and then narrow, to follow lateral connections when the direct path was blocked, to read the bureaucratic language of old records for what it was not saying as much as what it was. She started with the address. The court yards lane address pulled up a property file that had been consolidated from several earlier records, a common feature of buildings that had passed through the land reform periods of the 20th century with their ownership categories repeatedly reclassified. She worked through the consolidation layers backwards. The Shen family appeared in the earliest stratum. They had held the property since 1887, the record noted, through a period of continuous family occupation. The record was dry and administrative. Names of successive household heads, changes to the registered occupant list, notations of taxes paid. She moved through the decades methodically. The early republic years, the Japanese occupation period with its administrative gaps, the post-war reassignment of household registrations. Then she reached 1966, the final entry in the Shen family record was dated November of that year.
The registered occupant was listed as Shen Yan-ching, female, born 1898, age at death 68, cause natural causes. The household registration was closed and the property transferred to district management. One line in the registration note caught her attention. She had seen bureaucratic addenda before, but this one was brief in a way that felt deliberate, as if the person writing it had chosen the minimum number of words to record a fact they considered significant. Registered occupant had not departed the property since 1955.
11 years. Ming-ju sat back from the screen. She looked at the date again.
1955.
The courtyard had 12 other documented residents in the years before. The household registration records showed family members, then fewer family members, then none. By 1955, the building's other rooms had been vacated, and Shen Yan-cheng was the last. And then she had not left, not for 11 years.
Ming-ju pulled up the architectural survey records next. The Beijing District Office maintained a separate archive of structural assessments that had been conducted at intervals for heritage and planning purposes. She found the Siheyuan's survey entries. The 1958 survey was standard. 12 rooms in the standard four-wing configuration.
Condition assessed wing by wing. The usual notations about roof tiles and drainage and structural integrity. The surveyor's [music] description of each room was brief, but distinct. The eastern wing rooms were noted for their original window lattice, the northern wing for its higher ceiling clearance.
12 distinct rooms, 12 distinct descriptions. Then the 1967 survey. It was filed a year after Shen Yan-cheng's death, presumably as part of the district's assessment of properties that had come under management.
Ming-ju read through it carefully. The surveyor described opening each of the 12 doors, and in each entry for all 12 rooms, the description was identical.
Single bare room, low table, folded cloth, ceramic lamp. Dimensions approximately 4 by 4 m. Water stain, upper left corner, plaster wall. Same phrasing, same room, 12 times. At the bottom of the 1967 survey, beneath the last entry, the surveyor had added a single handwritten note. It was brief enough that she almost missed it in the scan. Recommend do not demolish. No explanation, no technical justification, no reference to heritage value or structural significance. Four words and then the surveyor's signature and nothing after. Ming Shu sat very still at the hotel desk. She looked at the 1958 survey and the 1967 survey side by side on her screen. 12 different rooms, then 12 identical rooms. One year after Shen Yang Xing's death, after 11 years in which a woman had not left a building, the building had rearranged itself [music] around the one room she had stayed in.
She closed the laptop and sat in the dark for a while.
In the morning, she was going back to the courtyard. She left the camera at the hotel.
This was a decision she made while packing her bag in the morning and then unpacked by removing the camera strap from her shoulder and setting it on the desk beside the laptop. She stood for a moment looking at it. Then she took only her notebook, her pen, and her jacket against the cold and went out. The hutong in the morning was different from the afternoon. A man was sweeping the lane outside his gate. A woman walked past with a cloth bag of vegetables. Two children on their way somewhere, school bags bouncing. The ordinary sounds of a Beijing neighborhood doing what it did every day, indifferent to the faded red gate she stopped in front of and pushed open.
The courtyard was quiet. She crossed the paving to the northern wing, the taller one, the one whose higher ceiling clearance the 1958 survey had noted with the mild appreciation of a surveyor who knew good proportions when he measured them. The paulownia tree stood bare and still at the courtyard center. The sky above it was a flat winter white. She put her hand on the northern door's handle and stood there for a moment.
Then she turned it [music] and went inside. The room was the same room it had always been. Low table, folded cloth, ceramic lamp, the faint smell of old wood and closed air, the water stain in the upper left corner, unchanged from the first time she had documented it and every time since. The silence in the room was complete. Not the silence of emptiness, which had a particular quality she had learned to recognize in abandoned buildings, a kind of acoustic thinness. This was something else, denser, the silence of a space that had been held by someone's presence for a very long time and that had not forgotten.
Mingzhu walked to the table and sat down on the floor beside it, cross-legged, the way you sat at a low table.
She set her notebook down and did not open it. She looked at the room for a while without speaking. Then she began.
She said the name first. She said it the way she'd been saying names throughout this series of investigations, clearly, without ceremony, as a simple act of acknowledgement. Shen Yanching.
She said the birth year and the death year. She said that she had found the household record and the note about 11 years without leaving and the architectural surveys before and after.
She described what she understood. A woman who had outlasted everyone else in the building and stayed on after they had gone, who had remained for 11 years inside these walls while the world outside underwent changes. She apparently had no desire or ability to navigate, who had died here and left the building in a state that a surveyor in 1967 had described with clinical accuracy and no [music] explanation and had then added four words that were as close to an acknowledgement as a bureaucratic document allowed. Your building is scheduled to be partially demolished in 5 weeks. Ming Ju said. She said it plainly, the way she would say it to a colleague. I am going to file the preservation report before I leave Beijing today.
I am going to argue that this building [music] cannot be demolished. Not for the standard reasons, but because what it contains is irreplaceable.
I don't know how to describe what it contains in language the heritage committee will accept, but I am going to find language that works. She paused. Your name will be in the report. The room was silent. The ceramic lamp on the floor to the right of the table had no oil in it. She had documented this on her first visit and on every subsequent one, an empty lamp, the wick holder dry. She had not touched it at any point. It glowed, not brightly, a faint warm light, the color of a candle seen through paper emanating from the lamp's body as if from somewhere inside the glaze. It lasted approximately 4 seconds. She counted because counting was what she did when she needed to [music] stay present in a moment she could not account for. Then it stopped. The room was as it had been, cold, still. The water stain [music] in the corner, the folded cloth on the table beside her. Ming Ju sat for another minute without moving.
Then she picked up her notebook and her pen and stood and walked back to the door and closed it behind [music] her carefully and went to write the most important report of her career. She wrote the report on the train back to Shanghai, 4 hours and 40 minutes, Beijing South to Shanghai Hongqiao. The flat winter landscape of the North China Plain moving past the window in the particular gray-brown of a November afternoon. She had her laptop open and the survey photographs arranged across two windows and her notes open in a third and she did not stop except once for water and once to stand briefly in the car's vestibule and look at nothing for a few minutes. The report was unusual from its first paragraph and she knew it. A standard heritage preservation submission documented structural significance historical association architectural typology the established categories that a review committee could evaluate against established criteria. She used all of those. The Siheyuan's age, its construction quality, its contribution to the remaining hutong fabric of Dongcheng its association with a family whose occupations spanned nearly eight decades of Chinese history.
These were real and documentable and she wrote them with her usual precision.
Then she wrote the section she titled custodial continuity.
>> [music] >> She described a 1958 architectural survey and the 1967 survey in full. She described the discrepancy between them, 12 distinct rooms becoming one repeated room, a transformation with no structural explanation in any record, and she described her own findings, documented with dated photographs and laser measurements, confirming that the 1967 condition persisted into the present.
She wrote it factually and without interpretation as she had been trained to write difficult things. She described Shen Yan Ching, the dates, the household record, the notation that the registered occupant had not left the property since 1955.
She wrote that the building's anomalous interior configuration appeared to have originated in the period of Shen Yan Ching's solitary occupation and persisted unchanged in the 57 years since her death. She wrote, "The building constitutes a unique heritage phenomenon for which no architectural precedent exists in the existing literature.
It requires indefinite preservation precisely because it cannot be explained and because what cannot be explained cannot be reconstructed if demolished."
In the report's dedication section, a field usually left blank or filled with a pro forma institutional acknowledgement, she wrote, "This report is dedicated to Shen Yan Ching, 1898 to 1966, last custodian of the Shen family Siheyuan, Dongcheng District, Beijing."
She kept this building. She submitted the report electronically from the train 40 minutes before arrival. The demolition order was suspended within 10 days. The Beijing Municipal Heritage Committee cited the submitted documentation as requiring further review.
A standard procedural response that bought time. Mingzhu followed up every two weeks with additional material, a supplementary photographic report, a second structural assessment she commissioned from a Beijing colleague, a letter of support from three other architectural historians she had contacted through her university network. She was methodical and persistent and did not let the matter rest.
Six months after her initial submission, the demolition order was formally canceled. The Siheyuan was designated a protected structure under category B of the municipal heritage classification, a designation that prohibited demolition and required periodic maintenance. She returned to Beijing in April for the formal documentation of the designation.
The hutong had changed slightly since November. A shop had opened two lanes over. The lane itself was cleaner.
Spring had put new leaves on the trees that overhung the gray stone walls. She walked to the red gate and pushed it open. The courtyard was the same. The Paulownia tree was in new leaf, pale green in the spring morning light. The four wings stood as they had stood. She went to the nearest door, the first one she had opened in November, eastern wing, far right, and turned the handle and pushed it open. The same room, table, cloth, lamp, the water stain in the corner, unchanged. She stood in the doorway for a moment and looked at it without entering. Then she stepped back and closed the door with care, the care she brought now to all doors of this building, and walked back through the courtyard and out through the red gate.
Behind her, the 12 doors stood closed in their four wings. The paulownia tree held its new leaves against a clear Beijing sky. She did not look back. She had done what she came to do.
If this story stayed with you, I think it was meant to. New stories from across Asia every week right here.
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