Haidian Park, formerly built in 1690, was originally Changchun Garden, which was burned by the British and French coalition forces in 1860. It was rebuilt in 2003 and named Haidian Park. It covers 34 hectares. It is located in the northwest corner of Beijing's Fourth Ring Interchange and adjacent to Tsinghua, Peking University and Summer Palace. The main landscapes in the park are Haidian Huagu, Xianren Chenglu, Shuangqiao Poetry, Danling Qingbo, Wanquan Shuyu, Chaoyuan Shusheng and so on. Haidian Park is open to visitors free of charge. It is a good place for visitors and citizens to enjoy leisure and exercise. I just went to the park to take some Autumn scenes and share them with you.