In the first year of Song Xuanhe, Hui Zong handed over the amount of "Chongfu Daoyuan" to Emperor Zhenwu and became a Taoist temple. In the thirty-second year of Jiajing in Ming Dynasty (1553), the enemy burned and looted Lin San.
Fiona Fang, around Zhuang and Dudaoyuan, was undisturbed for miles. The villagers thought it was God's blessing and raised money one after another. In the thirty-eighth year of Jiajing (1559), the courtyard was rebuilt, and Liang was asked to take notes, saying, "It is also obvious that Japanese people have changed and Rao Haimin has made special efforts to protect peace." Until the Qing dynasty, the villagers thought that Taoist temple could protect one side, so they regarded Taoist temple as a "shrine".
Since the reconstruction, the main hall has been in disrepair for a long time. In the twenty-first year of Guangxu, Cao Xiang, a citizen of this city, invited the urban and rural people to raise more than 4,000 taels of silver for repairs. During the Republic of China, Ren Zhaoquan, a fellow countryman, initiated the reconstruction, changing the original four-entry and three-entry patios into three-entry and two-entry patios, mainly to pay homage to Zhenwu Emperor, the 36-day general and the Ten-Hall Emperor Yan. According to the records in Shanghai New Grand View (1993), from Song Dynasty to Qing Dynasty, the palace system formed by Puxi Chongfu Taoist Academy and Penglai Taoist Academy had a great influence on the development of Taoism in Songjiang and Shanghai.