Beng Milie is about 50 kilometers away from Angkor Temple and takes more than an hour by car. Beng Milie was built from the late 11th to the early 12th century, during the reign of King Suyama II, in a style similar to the small Angkor Temple and on a slightly smaller scale. The temple was completely collapsed when it was discovered and repaired, which was extremely difficult. During the civil war, many mines were planted, and it took the Cambodian government eight years to clear the mines since 2003 and open tourism in 2011. Entering the temple through a ramp, the stone carvings on both sides of the ramp have been destroyed, but the statue of a seven-headed faucet is still relatively complete, standing alone on the side of the road. The gate of the temple has completely collapsed, and the doorway is full of slabs and rocks, and visitors cannot pass. The scenic spot has specially built a boardwalk for visitors to visit, enter from the south side gate of the temple, follow this tour route, climb up and down from the ruins, you can see the various parts of the temple interior, and then come out from the south gate. Most of the temple's corridors collapsed, filled with stones, like rows of abandoned trenches. The stone piled up in the main temple was a hill, and the sandstone coffin inside was long stolen and abandoned in a corner outside the temple. Trees in the courtyard grew wild for centuries, with roots and branches wrapped in crumbling gateposts and walls. Only one of the temple's Tibetan pavilions was slightly intact.