The temple faces south, with a building area of 400 square meters. The main buildings are the Mountain Gate, Monument Pavilion, Lux Hall, Tianwang Hall, Dharma Hall, Bodhisattva Hall and Ursa Hall. The structure is rigorous, magnificent, the Han and Tibetan cultures are integrated and the national characteristics are rich. The stone tablet in the museum is 4.2 meters high, with the front in Chinese and the back in Tibetan. It is a well-preserved treasure in the temple. According to Xie Jisheng, a professor at Capital Normal University, this stone tablet is the only witness of the Sino-Tibetan cultural exchange with exact date and the longest preservation time in northwest China. There are also precious Buddhist murals, statues, Tibetan scriptures, bronze statues, cultural relics handed down from ancient times, and rare sculptures of the story of Journey to the West. Tusilu also left a huge family tomb in Liancheng area, where precious cultural remains were buried. At the same time, Lu Tusi also left a large number of cultural relics, genealogy, documents and magical legends handed down from generation to generation, which greatly enriched Yongdeng culture. Among them, the cultural relics handed down by Lu Tusi in Yongdeng County Museum are exquisite and numerous national treasures.
It is said that the dragon robe, the long-lived robe of group flowers and two lacquer plates handed down by the Qing Tusi family given by Emperor Jiaqing to Lu Jixun, the 15th Tusi, are all national first-class cultural relics, and a large number of bronze Buddha statues and Thangka in the early Ming Dynasty have been found in these temples, which are rare Buddhist cultural relics.
Yongdeng County Museum also has a large collection of gold, silver, copper, jade, porcelain, calligraphy and painting, genealogy, costumes and utensils handed down by the toast, which are dazzling and exquisite. These precious cultural relics witnessed the glory of Tusi City and displayed the splendid culture of Ming and Qing Dynasties.