As for the origin of the name Chopping Wood Court, some people say that it was originally a "Chopping Wood City" here, all selling chopping wood. Others say that in addition to cooking for the public, these firewood splitters also provide bricks and tiles for the Dayaogou kiln. In Liu Yun's collection of poems "Baiyin in Qingdao", we can see such a note - ""Chopping Wood Court near Zhongshan Road, the most busy area. In the courtyard, firewood-splitting houses are built, so they are named. Noble people disdain it, but the rent is light and cheap, and they have to deal with it in great difficulty. " That is to say, the firewood splitting yard is named for the temporary commercial "firewood splitting house" built in it. These "wood-splitting houses" are well known to some old Qingdao people. Most of them are broken-board houses built at will, low and humid. Since the mid-1920s, Qingdao was built as a city, where a Jiangning Road was built and several courtyards were built. Jiangning Road has gradually become a commercial pedestrian street. Most of the courtyards on the street are shops, restaurants and firewood splitting courtyards. Such an atmosphere of fireworks is probably what life should look like. Alleys such as downtown always make people feel particularly friendly. Like those bluestone paths, each family emits the fragrance of food, and the fireworks that rise are what life is like.