in the temple The Nan Tien complex is a Chinese-styled palace structure built using modern architectural techniques. Designed by Australian architects, Jones Brewster Regan and built by Australian construction workers, it occupies a semi-rural hillside site several square kilometres in size, and is set amidst landscaped gardens. In addition to various meeting rooms, a museum, cultural, conference and accommodation facilities and a restaurant, the Nan Tien temple complex includes two massive prayer halls (known as the
Great Mercy Shrine and the
Great Hero Hall) within which are located multiple monumental
Buddha and
Bodhisattva statues, as well as an eight-level
pagoda, serving as a
columbarium intended to house the cremated remains of 7000 people. The front hall houses the Thousand Handed
Avalokitesvara (known as
Kuan Yin in Chinese culture) and the main hall in the back houses the
Five Dhyani Buddhas, Amogasiddhi, Ratnasambhava, Vairocana,
Amitabha and Akshobhya. Both halls have thousands of tiny statues of Buddha on the walls. The complex also has amenities for monks, nuns and visitors, and a large garden with a pagoda. The architecture of the complex is notable because it incorporates the features of several styles of Buddhism. The pagoda is distinctly Chinese, with flying eaves and an angular profile. The main temples incorporates features of
Tibetan monastic architecture, with multi-storey painted temple buildings set atop high stone platforms (see the
Potala Palace). The courtyards feature Japanese-style gardens, while the statues and shrines often incorporate bright, South-East Asian colour schemes, in contrast to the more austere styles favoured in China. ==Tourism==