A Historic Building on a Cliff, offering panoramic views of Jiedezhen, surrounded by mist and clouds, resembling a fairyland. Longzhu Ge is built on a cliff, with soaring eaves and ornate details, winding stone steps resembling dragon ridges. Ascending offers a complete view of the Jiedezhen city walls. Mist and clouds swirl around the building, creating a magical atmosphere. Inside, faded murals and intricate carvings depict “Dragon Pearl” symbols, representing the refined ceramic culture of Jiedezhen’s thousand-year kiln fire. The core area includes the “Yunhai Viewing Platform” and “Dragon Pearl Cave,” the former offering a view of the birthplace of Jiedezhen’s ceramic culture, and the latter delving into the mountain depths, with ancient “kiln fire” carvings on the walls, witnessing the glory of the ancient kiln sites. Bamboo groves line the paths, with babbling streams, and the “Listening Waves Pavilion” is particularly noteworthy, where the wind rustling through the bamboo sounds like ancient music. Longzhu Ge was originally built in the Southern Song Dynasty as a place for monks to meditate, and later became famous due to Jiedezhen’s ceramics, using “Dragon Pearl” to represent the essence of the ceramics. The Song Dynasty poet Huang Tingjian wrote: “Cloud Sea locks Dragon Pearl, one piece contains ten thousand furnaces.” The Qing Dynasty scholar Yuan Mei left a poem: “Glaze color gathers cloud vapor, kiln smoke surrounds the pavilion.” This place is both a natural wonder and the spiritual totem of Jiedezhen’s ceramic civilization, condensing the spirit of the mountains and millennium craftsmanship into a single pavilion, inspiring awe and wonder.