The overall planning of Yuan Guang Chan Temple follows the traditional monastic regulations, with elegant green-tiled and white-walled buildings framing solemn, magnificent northern palace-style architecture and tastefully designed gardens. This creates an exquisite scene that looks like a fairyland. On the side gate are carved images of a deer resting on a Dharmawheel, symbolizing the Buddha's initial teaching of the Four Noble Truths to the Five Bhikshus in Sarnath's Deer Park. This harmonizes with the Abbot's aspiration to revive Buddhist education.
Inside the mountain gate is the Maitreya Hall, which enshrines the smiling Maitreya Bodhisattva in the style of the cloth-pouch monk and the Bodhisattva Weituo, who vows to protect the Dharma. On either side are the Four Heavenly Kings, exquisitely carved to appear lifelike. The joyfully laughing Maitreya Bodhisattva brings happiness to everyone who encounters him. Bodhisattva Weituo holds a sword, radiating resolute, magnificent energy that appears to repel demonic influences. Beyond the mountain gate is a spacious square. To the left and right are lushly adorned gardens. Continue forward and ascend steps to reach the main hall, which has dual paths to the left and right. In the center is a sculpture of nine dragons coiled around a pillar, with Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara standing atop the dragons, holding a vial and guiding all who come.
The Great Hall of the Shakyamuni Buddha, centered on the temple site, serves as the spiritual beacon for Buddhist followers. Enshrined inside are the "Huayan Three Saints"—Buddha Shakyamuni, Bodhisattva Manjushri, and Bodhisattva Samantabhadra—with Arhat Mahakashyapa and Arhat Ananda flanking them on either side. Beneath the main hall is the Zhengdao Auditorium, which is typically used by female practitioners for morning and evening Dharma recitations and occasionally serves as a meditation space for laypeople. The back hall, the Merit Hall, enshrines Bodhisattva Ksitigarbha and Arhat Mokshankara, where devotees enshrine ancestral plaques for veneration. Additional facilities include the kitchen, dining hall, classrooms, and dormitories, accommodating over one hundred people. (Source: Yuan Guang Chan Temple)