The National Museum of Phnom Penh was built in 1913 and currently houses handicrafts and sculpture art from the 1st century and the Angkor Dynasty, several photos of Angkor taken by French photographers, and many authentic Angkor Wat sculptures. The museum is open-plan design for a typical traditional Khmer architectural style, full of exotic flavors. A small pavilion was built in the center, offering a statue of a god, surrounded by four artificial lotus ponds, with grass and benches, like a soundproof wall, blocking the hustle and bustle of the downtown outside the museum, allowing visitors to visit quietly. The name of the exhibition hall of the National Museum of Phnom Penh is really not remembered. The exhibits are mainly stone sculptures, mainly Buddha statues. Most of them come from Angkor Wat in Siem Reap. There are also some headpiece jewelry and bronzes. There is a hall with some wooden seats, carriages. The impression is quite deep is that a buried excavation has a lot of bracelets of the kind of glass small particles blue red.