The 33-room hall was built in 1164, burned to ashes in 1249, and rebuilt in 1266. It is named after the temple divided into 33 rooms, which is the longest in Japan. The 33-room hall is famous for its 1001 Guanyin temples. At present, its own church building, the self-respect, the sitting position of the thousand hands Guanyin, the corridor and the wooden 28 statues of the main Buddha and the wind god, the thunder god, have been listed as Japanese national treasure. It is the only building in the form of a thousand-body Guanyintang that remained in Japan at the end of Ping An. The largest one in the hall was carved in 1254. The Buddha statue is a wooden 11-faced, thousands of hands and thousands of eyes, accompanied by 500 small Guanyin statues arranged in rows on the left and right. The visual effects are quite shocking.