Guan Jie Pavilion was donated by Guo Zhongyuan, the ancestor of Baiqi Hui people in Hongwu period of Ming Dynasty. It turned out to be a gazebo, which was used to wait for guests crossing the river. It lasted more than 300 years, during which the wind and rain eroded and the earthquake shook, resulting in the destruction of six stone pillars behind and the collapse of the pavilion cover. In the thirty-sixth year of Qingganlong (177 1), it was hastily repaired, and the pavilion tower monument was rebuilt at the end of the bridge. Now it stands behind the east side, and the pavilion cover is supported by masonry at the back, which is the shape of today. In the twentieth year of Guangxu (1894), it was rebuilt again, and the west side monument was recorded. Stone Pavilion, facing south, is an ancient pavilion with pure granite structure at four corners. Its front is 7 meters long, 6.7 meters wide and 5 meters high, covering an area of nearly 50 square meters. The umbrella-shaped pavilion covers are inclined in four directions, and each side is spliced into an isosceles triangular plane by more than a dozen stone slabs with different lengths. The four raised pavilion ridges and the gourd-shaped pavilion roof are all roughly carved granite, and the whole pavilion cover is supported by 20 Liang Shi and 16 square stone pillars. There are *** 12 quadrangular columns, and the foundation forms a big "mouth"; There are 4 central stone pillars, and their foundations also form a small "mouth"; The big "mouth" with the small "mouth" just becomes a "back" word. A pavilion of this structure is very rare.