The Altar of Land and Grain is located southwest of the Forbidden City, opposite the Imperial Ancestral Temple symmetrically on both sides of Beijing Central Axis. Two layers of wall encircle it to form a double-walled court-yard. Surrounded by a walled square in the center, the inner courtyard section served as the space for ritual ceremonies. The inner courtyard walls and the inner low walls both have a door on each side, with the altar standing in the center. In the southwest corner of the inner courtyard are the Divine Storage and the Divine Kitchen. Outside the west wall is the Sacrifice Butchering Pavilion Complex. The outer section is home to 612 ancient cypress trees, giving the imperial altar complexes an atmosphere of solitude. A traditional Chinese garden landscape was created in the outer section after 1914. There are two scenes of rockery in the west and an irregular shaped pond lies in the southwest, with a waterside pavilion and a greenhouse called Tanghuawu.