Taipei







Special municipality in Republic of China (Taiwan)















































































































Taipei
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臺北市

Special municipality
Taipei City

Clockwise from top: Taipei skyline with the Taipei 101 in the background, Grand Hotel, Far Eastern Plaza, National Palace Museum, Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, Jiantan Station
Clockwise from top: Taipei skyline with the Taipei 101 in the background, Grand Hotel, Far Eastern Plaza, National Palace Museum, Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, Jiantan Station





Flag of Taipei
Flag

Official logo of Taipei
Logo
Etymology: pinyin: Táiběi; literally: "Taiwan north"
Nickname(s): The City of Azaleas
Taiwan ROC political division map Taipei City (2010).svg
Coordinates: 25°04′N 121°31′E / 25.067°N 121.517°E / 25.067; 121.517Coordinates: 25°04′N 121°31′E / 25.067°N 121.517°E / 25.067; 121.517
Country Republic of China (Taiwan)
Region Northern Taiwan
Settled 1709
Seat Xinyi District
Districts
Government
 • Mayor

Ko Wen-je (Ind.)
 • Council
Taipei City Council
Area[1][2]
 • Special municipality

271.80 km2 (104.94 sq mi)
 • Water 2.7 km2 (1.0 sq mi)  1.0%
 • Urban
1,140 km2 (440 sq mi)
Area rank 16 out of 22
Population (2018)
 • Special municipality
2,674,063
 • Rank 4 out of 22
 • Density 9,800/km2 (25,000/sq mi)
 • Urban[3]
8,500,000
 • Urban density 7,500/km2 (19,000/sq mi)
Time zone
UTC+8 (National Standard Time)
Postal code 100–116
Area code(s) (0)2
ISO 3166 code TW-TPE
Bird
Formosan blue magpie (Urocissa caerulea)
Flower
Azalea (Rhododendron nudiflorum)
Tree
Banyan (India laurel fig, Ficus microcarpa)
Website
english.gov.taipei (in English)


































Taipei

Taipei (Chinese characters).svg
"Taipei" in Traditional (top) and Simplified (bottom) Chinese characters

Chinese name
Traditional Chinese 臺北 or 台北
Simplified Chinese 台北
Literal meaning "Tai[wan] North"




































































Japanese name
Kanji 台北
Kana タイペイ、たいほく(old)
Kyūjitai 臺北








Taipei (/ˌtˈp/),[4] officially known as Taipei City, is the capital[a] and a special municipality of Taiwan (officially known as the Republic of China, "ROC"). Sitting at the northern tip of the island, Taipei City is an enclave of the municipality of New Taipei City that sits about 25 km (16 mi) southwest of the northern port city Keelung. Most of the city is located in the Taipei Basin, an ancient lakebed. The basin is bounded by the relatively narrow valleys of the Keelung and Xindian rivers, which join to form the Tamsui River along the city's western border.[5]


The city proper is home to an estimated population of 2,704,810 (2015),[6] forming the core part of the Taipei–Keelung metropolitan area, which includes the nearby cities of New Taipei and Keelung with a population of 7,047,559,[6][7] the 40th most-populous urban area in the world—roughly one-third of Taiwanese citizens live in the metro district. The name "Taipei" can refer either to the whole metropolitan area or the city proper.


Taipei is the political, economic, educational, and cultural center of Taiwan and one of the major hubs in East Asia. Considered to be a global city,[8] Taipei is part of a major high-tech industrial area.[9]Railways, high-speed rail, highways, airports, and bus lines connect Taipei with all parts of the island. The city is served by two airports – Taipei Songshan and Taiwan Taoyuan. Taipei is home to various world-famous architectural or cultural landmarks, which include Taipei 101, Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, Dalongdong Baoan Temple, Hsing Tian Kong, Lungshan Temple of Manka, National Palace Museum, Presidential Office Building, Taipei Guest House, Ximending, and several night markets dispersed throughout the city. Natural features such as Maokong, Yangmingshan, and hot springs are also well known to international visitors.


In English-language news reports the name Taipei often serves as a synecdoche referring to Taiwan's national government. Due to the ambiguous political status of Taiwan internationally, the term Chinese Taipei is also sometimes pressed into service as a synonym for the entire country, as when Taiwan's government representatives participate in international organizations or Taiwan's athletes participate in international sporting events.




Contents






  • 1 Name


  • 2 History


    • 2.1 First settlements


    • 2.2 Empire of Japan


    • 2.3 Republic of China




  • 3 Geography


    • 3.1 Climate


    • 3.2 Air quality


    • 3.3 Cityscape




  • 4 Demographics


  • 5 Economy


  • 6 Culture


    • 6.1 Tourism


      • 6.1.1 Commemorative sites and museums


      • 6.1.2 Taipei 101


      • 6.1.3 Performing arts


      • 6.1.4 Shopping and recreation


      • 6.1.5 Temples




    • 6.2 Festivals and events


    • 6.3 Taipei in films




  • 7 Government


    • 7.1 Garbage recycling


    • 7.2 Administrative divisions


    • 7.3 City planning




  • 8 Transportation


    • 8.1 Metro


    • 8.2 Rail


    • 8.3 Bus


    • 8.4 Airports


    • 8.5 Ticketing




  • 9 Education


    • 9.1 Notable Mandarin language programs for foreigners




  • 10 Sports


    • 10.1 Major sporting events


    • 10.2 Youth baseball




  • 11 Media


    • 11.1 Television


    • 11.2 Newspapers




  • 12 International relations


    • 12.1 Twin towns and sister cities


    • 12.2 Partner cities


    • 12.3 Friendship cities




  • 13 In popular culture


  • 14 Gallery


  • 15 See also


  • 16 Notes


  • 17 References


  • 18 External links





Name



The spelling Taipei derives from the Wade–Giles romanization T'ai-pei.[10] The name could be also romanized as Táiběi according to Hanyu Pinyin and Tongyong Pinyin.[11][12]



History





The National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in Taipei's Liberty Square


Prior to the significant influx of Han Chinese immigrants, the region of Taipei Basin was mainly inhabited by the Ketagalan plains aborigines. The number of Han immigrants gradually increased in the early 18th century under Qing Dynasty rule after the government began permitting development in the area.[13] In 1875, the northern part of the island was incorporated into the new Taipeh Prefecture.


The Qing dynasty of China made Taipeh-fu the temporary capital of the island in 1887 when it was declared a province (Fukien-Taiwan Province).[14][15] Taipeh was formally made the provincial capital in 1894.


Japan acquired Taiwan in 1895 under the Treaty of Shimonoseki after the First Sino-Japanese War. Taiwan became a colony of Imperial Japan with Taihoku (formerly Taipeh-fu) as its capital. The city was administered under Taihoku Prefecture. Taiwan's Japanese rulers embarked on an extensive program of advanced urban planning that featured extensive railroad links. A number of Taipei landmarks and cultural institutions date from this period.[16]


Following the surrender of Japan to the United States of America of 1945, effective control of Taiwan was handed to the Republic of China (ROC) (see Retrocession Day). After losing mainland China to the Chinese Communist Party in the Chinese Civil War, the ruling Kuomintang relocated the ROC government to Taiwan and declared Taipei the provisional capital of the ROC in December 1949.[17][18] Taiwan's Kuomintang rulers regarded the city as the capital of Taiwan Province and their control as mandated by General Order No. 1.


In 1990 Taipei provided the backdrop for the Wild Lily student rallies that moved Taiwanese society from one-party rule to multi-party democracy by 1996. The city has ever since served as the seat of Taiwan's democratically elected national government.



First settlements


The region known as the Taipei Basin was home to Ketagalan tribes before the eighteenth century.[19]Han Chinese mainly from Fujian Province of Qing dynasty China began to settle in the Taipei Basin in 1709.[20][21]


In the late 19th century, the Taipei area, where the major Han Chinese settlements in northern Taiwan and one of the designated overseas trade ports, Tamsui, were located, gained economic importance due to the booming overseas trade, especially that of tea export. In 1875, the northern part of Taiwan was separated from Taiwan Prefecture and incorporated into the new Taipeh Prefecture as a new administrative entity of the Qing dynasty.[16] Having been established adjoining the flourishing townships of Bangka, Dalongdong, and Twatutia, the new prefectural capital was known as Chengnei (Chinese: 城內; pinyin: chéngnèi; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: siâⁿ-lāi), "the inner city", and government buildings were erected there. From 1875 until the beginning of Japanese rule in 1895, Taipei was part of Tamsui County of Taipeh Prefecture and the prefectural capital.


In 1885, work commenced to govern the island as a province, and Taipeh was temporarily made the provincial capital. The city officially became the capital in 1894.[citation needed] All that remains from the Qing era is the north gate. The west gate and city walls were demolished by the Japanese while the south gate, little south gate, and east gate were extensively modified by the Kuomintang and have lost much of their original character.[22]



Empire of Japan




The Taihoku Prefecture government building in the 1910s (now the Control Yuan)


As settlement for losing the First Sino-Japanese War, China ceded the island of Taiwan to the Empire of Japan in 1895 as part of the Treaty of Shimonoseki. After the Japanese take-over, Taipei, called Taihoku in Japanese, was retained as the capital and emerged as the political center of the Japanese Colonial Government.[16] During that time the city acquired the characteristics of an administrative center, including many new public buildings and housing for civil servants. Much of the architecture of Taipei dates from the period of Japanese rule, including the Presidential Building which was the Office of the Governor-General of Taiwan.


During Japanese rule, Taihoku was incorporated in 1920 as part of Taihoku Prefecture. It included Bangka, Twatutia, and Jōnai (城內) among other small settlements. The eastern village of Matsuyama (松山庄, modern-day Songshan District, Taipei) was annexed into Taihoku City in 1938. Upon the Japanese defeat in the Pacific War and its consequent surrender in August 1945, the Kuomintang (Chinese Nationalist Party) assumed control of Taiwan. Subsequently, a temporary Office of the Taiwan Province Administrative Governor was established in Taipei City.[23]



Republic of China




With President Chiang Kai-shek, U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower waved to a crowd during his visit to Taipei in June 1960.


In 1947 the Kuomintang (KMT) government under Chiang Kai-shek declared island-wide martial law in Taiwan as a result of the February 28 Incident, which began with incidents in Taipei but led to an island-wide crackdown on the local population by forces loyal to Chiang. Two years later, on 7 December 1949, Chiang and the Kuomintang forces were forced to flee mainland China by the Communists near the end of the Chinese Civil War. The KMT-led national government that fled to Taiwan declared Taipei to be the provisional capital of a continuing Republic of China, with the official capital at Nanjing (Nanking) even though that city was under Communist control.[17][18]


Taipei expanded greatly in the decades after 1949, and as approved on 30 December 1966, by the Executive Yuan, Taipei was declared a special centrally administered municipality on 1 July 1967, and given the administrative status of a province.[21] In the following year, Taipei City expanded again by annexing Shilin, Beitou, Neihu, Nangang, Jingmei, and Muzha. At that time, the city's total area increased fourfold by absorbing several outlying towns and villages and the population increased to 1.56 million people.[21]


The city's population, which had reached one million in the early 1960s, also expanded rapidly after 1967, exceeding two million by the mid-1970s. Although growth within the city itself gradually slowed thereafter[23] — its population had become relatively stable by the mid-1990s — Taipei remained one of the world's most densely populated urban areas, and the population continued to increase in the region surrounding the city, notably along the corridor between Taipei and Keelung.


In 1990 Taipei's 16 districts were consolidated into the current 12 districts.[24]Mass democracy rallies that year in the plaza around Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall led to an island-wide transition to multi-party democracy, where legislators are chosen via regularly scheduled popular elections, during the presidency of Lee Teng-Hui.



Geography




The city of Taipei, as seen from Maokong.


Taipei City is located in the Taipei Basin in northern Taiwan.[25] It is bordered by the Xindian River on the south and the Tamsui River on the west. The generally low-lying terrain of the central areas on the western side of the municipality slopes upward to the south and east and especially to the north,[5] where it reaches 1,120 metres (3,675 ft) at Qixing Mountain, the highest (inactive) volcano in Taiwan in Yangmingshan National Park. The northern districts of Shilin and Beitou extend north of the Keelung River and are bordered by Yangmingshan National Park. The Taipei city limits cover an area of 271.7997 km2 (104.9425 sq mi),[26] ranking sixteenth of twenty-five among all counties and cities in Taiwan.


Two peaks, Qixing Mountain and Mt. Datun, rise to the northeast of the city.[27] Qixing Mountain is located on the Tatun Volcano Group and the tallest mountain at the rim of the Taipei Basin, with its main peak at 1,120 metres (3,670 ft). Mt. Datun's main peak is 1,092 metres (3,583 ft). These former volcanoes make up the western section of Yangmingshan National Park, extending from Mt. Datun northward to Mt. Caigongkeng (菜公坑山). Located on a broad saddle between two mountains, the area also contains the marshy Datun Pond.


To the southeast of the city lie the Songshan Hills and the Qingshui Ravine, which form a barrier of lush woods.[27]



Climate


Taipei has a monsoon-influenced humid subtropical climate[28][29][30] (Köppen: Cfa).[31] Summers are long-lasting, hot and humid, and accompanied by occasional heavy rainstorms and typhoons, while winters are short, generally warm and generally very foggy due to the northeasterly winds from the vast Siberian High being intensified by the pooling of this cooler air in the Taipei Basin. As in the rest of Northern Taiwan, daytime temperatures of Taipei can often peak above 26 degrees Celsius during a warm winter day, while they can dip below 26 degrees Celsius during a rainy summer's afternoon. Occasional cold fronts during the winter months can drop the daily temperature by 3 to 5 degrees Celsius, though temperatures rarely drop below 10 degrees Celsius.[32] Extreme temperatures ranged from −0.2 °C (31.6 °F) on 13 February 1901 to 39.3 °C (102.7 °F) on 8 August 2013, while snow has never been recorded in the city besides on mountains located within the city limit such as Yangmingshan. Due to Taiwan's location in the Pacific Ocean, it is affected by the Pacific typhoon season, which occurs between June and October.







































































































































































Air quality


When compared to other Asian cities, Taipei has "excellent" capabilities for managing air quality in the city.[34] Its rainy climate, location near the coast, and strong environmental regulations have prevented air pollution from becoming a substantial health issue, at least compared to cities in southeast Asia and industrial China. However, smog is extremely common and there is poor visibility throughout the city after rain-less days.


Motor vehicle engine exhaust, particularly from motor scooters, is a source of air pollution in Taipei. There are higher levels of fine particulate matter and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the mornings because of less air movement; sunlight reduces some pollution.[35] Occasionally, dust storms from Mainland China can temporarily bring extremely poor air quality to the city.[36]



Cityscape






Taipei viewed from Tiger Mountain, with Taipei 101 on the left.



Demographics













































Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1985 2,507,620 —    
1990 2,719,659 +8.5%
1995 2,632,863 −3.2%
2000 2,646,474 +0.5%
2005 2,632,242 −0.5%
2010 2,618,772 −0.5%
2015 2,704,810 +3.3%
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Crowd in the Shilin Night Market


Taipei City is home to 2,704,810 people (2015), while the metropolitan area has a population of 7,047,559 people.[6] The population of the city has been decreasing in recent years while the population of the adjacent New Taipei has been increasing. The population loss, while rapid in its early years, has been stabilized by new lower density development and campaigns designed to increase birthrate in the city. The population has begun to rise since 2010.[6][37][38]


Due to Taipei's geography and location in the Taipei Basin as well as differing times of economic development of its districts, Taipei's population is not evenly distributed. The districts of Daan, Songshan, and Datong are the most densely populated. These districts, along with adjacent communities such as Yonghe and Zhonghe contain some of the most densely populated neighborhoods in the world.[37]


In 2008, the crude birth rate stood at 7.88% while the mortality rate stood at 5.94%. A decreasing and rapidly aging population is an important issue for the city.[37] By the end of 2009, one in ten people in Taipei was over 65 years of age.[39] Residents who had obtained a college education or higher accounted for 43.48% of the population, and the literacy rate stood at 99.18%.[37]


Like the rest of Taiwan, Taipei is composed of four major ethnic groups: Hoklos, Mainlanders, Hakkas, and aborigines.[37] Although Hoklos and Mainlanders form the majority of the population of the city, in recent decades many Hakkas have moved into the city. The aboriginal population in the city stands at 12,862 (<0.5%), concentrated mostly in the suburban districts. Foreigners (mainly from Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines) numbered 52,426 at the end of 2008.[37]


































































































Age Distribution Male Female
0–4 73680 69574
5–9 57701 53004
10–14 67345 61491
15–19 77974 72110
20–24 78552 73103
25–29 78447 80882
30–34 105245 118719
35–39 107951 123852
40–44 96222 111729
45–49 96535 112049
50–54 98411 112322
55–59 96092 110635
60–64 87691 100472
65–69 55867 64949
70–74 40087 50018
75–79 28413 39123
80–84 23314 26760
85+ 26109 25887


Economy




Bellavita Shopping Center and CPC Building at Xinyi Special District




Taipei Neihu Technology Park



As Taiwan's business, financial, and technology hub, Taipei has been at the center of rapid economic development in the country and has now become one of the global cities in technology and electronics.[40] This development is part of the so-called Taiwan Miracle which has seen dramatic growth in the city following foreign direct investment in the 1960s. Taiwan is now a creditor economy, holding one of the world's largest foreign exchange reserves of over US$403 billion as of December 2012.[41]


Despite the Asian financial crisis, the economy continues to expand at about 5% per year, with virtually full employment and low inflation. The city's GDP stand at US$327 billion in 2014.[42] As of 2013[update], the nominal GDP per capita in Taipei city is 5th highest in East Asia, behind Tokyo, Singapore, Osaka, and Hong Kong, but ahead of Seoul, as well as London and Paris, according to The Economist.[43] GDP per capita based on Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) in Taipei in 2015 was US$44173, behind that of Singapore (US$90151 in 2016 from the IMF) and Hong Kong (US$58322 in 2016 from the IMF; also based on PPP).[44] The Financial Times ranked Taipei highly in economic potential (2nd, behind Tokyo) and business friendliness (4th) in 2015.[45] The city is home to 30 billionaires, the 16th most in the world, ahead of many global cities such as Los Angeles and Sydney.[46] Business Insider also ranks Taipei the 5th most high-tech city globally, the highest in Asia, in 2017.[47] While the IESE Cities in Motion Index 2017 ranks Taipei as the smartest technology city globally.[48]


Taipei's main development fields include the information and communications technology (hardware and software), biotechnology, general merchandising (wholesale/retail), financial services, and MICE industries. Most of the country's major firms are based there including Asus, CTBC Bank, Fubon Financial Holding, Tatung Company, D-Link, and others. 5 Global Fortune 500 companies are headquartered in Taipei.[49] The city also attracts many multi-national corporations, international financial institutions, foreign consulates, and business organizations to set up base there. Thus, Taipei has nearly 3,500 registered foreign businesses and attracts over 50% of the total foreign investment in Taiwan.[50] Foreign companies with offices or regional headquarters in Taipei include Google, Microsoft, IBM, Intel, HSBC, Citibank, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, JP Morgan, PwC, and many others. Most financial and foreign firms like to reside in the central business district of Taipei, the Xinyi Special District. With Citi, JP Morgan, DBS Bank, Cathay Life Insurance, Shin Kong Commercial Bank, Hua Nan Bank, and soon Fubon Financial and Nan Shan Life Insurance all establishing skyscrapers in the area. Meanwhile, technology and electronics companies are often colocated in the Neihu Technology Park or the Nankang Software Park. The startup and innovation scene in Taipei is also very vibrant. In 2018 alone, Microsoft announced plans to invest US$34 million to create an artificial intelligence R&D center in Taipei, while Google announced it will hire 300 people and train 5,000 more in artificial intelligence for machines.[51] Taipei is currently Google's biggest engineering site in Asia.[52] IBM also announced in 2018 that it will develop a cloud research lab and expand its R&D center in Taipei with eyes on artificial intelligence, blockchain technology, and cloud computing. According to the 2016 Global Entrepreneurship Development Index, Taipei's entrepreneurial spirit ranks 6th worldwide and 1st in Asia.[53] Taipei has more than 400 startups and numerous incubation centers, accelerators, venture capitals, and angel investors.[54] The city's startup ecosystem is valued at US$580 million by Startup Genome in 2018.[55]


Tourism is a small but significant component of the local economy[56][57] with international visitors totaling almost 3 million in 2008.[58] Taipei has many top tourist attractions and contributes a significant amount to the US$6.8 billion tourism industry in Taiwan.[59]



Culture



Tourism



Tourism is a major part of Taipei's economy. In 2013, over 6.3 million overseas visitors visited Taipei, making the city the 15th most visited globally.[60] The influx of visitors contributed $10.8 billion USD to the city's economy in 2013, the 9th highest in the world and the most of any city in the Chinese-speaking world.[61]



Commemorative sites and museums




The National Palace Museum


The National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall is a famous monument, landmark and tourist attraction that was erected in memory of General Chiang Kai-shek, former President of the Republic of China.[62] The structure stands at the east end of Memorial Hall Square, site of the National Concert Hall and National Theater and their adjacent parks as well as the memorial. The landmarks of Liberty Square stand within sight of Taiwan's Presidential Building in Taipei's Zhongzheng District.




The National Taiwan Museum


The National Taiwan Museum sits nearby in what is now 228 Peace Memorial Park and has worn its present name since 1999. The museum is Taiwan's oldest, founded on 24 October 1908 by Taiwan's Japanese colonial government (1895-1945) as the Taiwan Governor's Museum. It was launched with a collection of 10,000 items to celebrate the opening of the island's North-South Railway.[63] In 1915 a new museum building opened its doors in what is now 228 Peace Memorial Park. This structure and the adjacent governor's office (now Presidential Office Building), served as the two most recognizable public buildings in Taiwan during its period of Japanese rule.[63]





Shung Ye Museum of Formosan Aborigines


The National Palace Museum is a vast art gallery and museum built around a permanent collection centered on ancient Chinese artifacts. It should not be confused with the Palace Museum in Beijing (which it is named after); both institutions trace their origins to the same institution. The collections were divided in the 1940s as a result of the Chinese Civil War.[64][65] The National Palace Museum in Taipei now boasts a truly international collection while housing one of the world's largest collections of artifacts from ancient China.[65]


The Shung Ye Museum of Formosan Aborigines stands just 200 metres across the road from the National Palace Museum. The museum offers displays of art and historical items by Taiwanese aborigines along with a range of multimedia displays.


The Taipei Fine Arts Museum was established in 1983 as the first museum in Taiwan dedicated to modern art. The museum is housed in a building designed for the purpose that takes inspiration from Japanese designs. Most art in the collection is by Taiwanese artists since 1940. Over 3,000 art works are organized into 13 groups.


The National Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall near Taipei 101 in Xinyi District is named in honor of a founding father of the Republic of China, Sun Yat-sen. The hall, completed on 16 May 1972, originally featured exhibits that depicted revolutionary events in China at the end of the Qing Dynasty. Today it functions as multi-purpose social, educational, concert and cultural center for Taiwan's citizens.[66]





Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei, aka "old city hall"


In 2001 a new museum opened as Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei. The museum is housed in a building that formerly housed Taipei City government offices.[67]




Night view of a fully lit Taipei 101



Taipei 101


Taipei 101 is a 101-floor landmark skyscraper that claimed the title of world's tallest building when it opened in 2004, a title it held for six years before relinquishing it to the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. Designed by C.Y. Lee & Partners and constructed by KTRT Joint Venture, Taipei 101 measures 509 m (1,670 ft) from ground to top, making it the first skyscraper in the world to break the half-kilometer mark in height. Built to withstand typhoon winds and earthquake tremors, its design incorporates many engineering innovations and has won numerous international awards. Taipei 101 remains one of the tallest skyscrapers in the world and holds LEED's certification as the world's largest "green" building. Its shopping mall and its indoor and outdoor observatories draw visitors from all over the world. Taipei 101's New Year's Eve fireworks display is a regular feature of international broadcasts.



Performing arts




Taiwan's National Concert Hall at night


The National Theater and Concert Hall stand at Taipei's Liberty Square and host events by foreign and domestic performers. Other leading concert venues include Zhongshan Hall at Ximending and the Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall near Taipei 101.


A new venue, the Taipei Performing Arts Center, is under construction and slated to open in 2015.[68][69] The venue will stand near the Shilin Night Market[70] and will house three theaters for events with multi-week runs. The architectural design, by Rem Koolhaas and OMA, was determined in 2009 in an international competition.[71] The same design process is also in place for a new Taipei Center for Popular Music and Taipei City Museum.[72]



Shopping and recreation



Taipei is known for its many night markets, the most famous of which is the Shilin Night Market in the Shilin District. The surrounding streets by Shilin Night Market are extremely crowded during the evening, usually opening late afternoon and operating well past midnight. Most night markets feature individual stalls selling a mixture of food, clothing, and consumer goods.




The busy streets of Ximending at night


Ximending has been a famous area for shopping and entertainment since the 1930s. Historic structures include a concert hall, a historic cinema, and the Red House Theater. Modern structures house karaoke businesses, art film cinemas, wide-release movie cinemas, electronic stores, and a wide variety of restaurants and fashion clothing stores.[73] The pedestrian area is especially popular with teens and has been called the "Harajuku" of Taipei.[74]





Eastern district at night


The newly developed Xinyi District is popular with tourists and locals alike for its many entertainment and shopping venues, as well as being the home of Taipei 101, a prime tourist attraction. Malls in the area include the sprawling Shin Kong Mitsukoshi complex, Breeze Center, Bellavita, Taipei 101 mall, Eslite Bookstore's flagship store (which includes a boutique mall), The Living Mall, ATT shopping mall, and the Vieshow Cinemas (formerly known as Warner Village). The Xinyi district also serves as the center of Taipei's active nightlife, with several popular lounge bars and nightclubs concentrated in a relatively small area around the Neo19, ATT 4 FUN and Taipei 101 buildings. Lounge bars such as Barcode and nightclubs such as Spark and Myst are among the most-visited places here.





Eslite Bookstore in Xinyi District


The thriving shopping area around Taipei Main Station includes the Taipei Underground Market and the original Shin Kong Mitsukoshi department store at Shin Kong Life Tower. Other popular shopping destinations include the Zhongshan Metro Mall, Dihua Street, the Guang Hua Digital Plaza, and the Core Pacific City. The Miramar Entertainment Park is known for its large Ferris wheel and IMAX theater.


Taipei maintains an extensive system of parks, green spaces, and nature preserves. Parks and forestry areas of note in and around the city include Yangmingshan National Park, Taipei Zoo and Da-an Forest Park. Yangmingshan National Park (located 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) north of the central city) is famous for its cherry blossoms, hot springs, and sulfur deposits. It is the home of famous writer Lin Yutang, the summer residence of Chiang Kai-shek, residences of foreign diplomats, the Chinese Culture University, the meeting place of the now defunct National Assembly of the Republic of China, and the Kuomintang Party Archives. The Taipei Zoo was founded in 1914 and covers an area of 165 hectares for animal sanctuary.


Bitan is known for boating and water sports. Tamsui is a popular sea-side resort town. Ocean beaches are accessible in several directions from Taipei.



Temples




Built in 1738, Longshan Temple is one of the oldest temples in the city.




Street corner shrine, Taipei 2013


Taipei has a variety of temples housing Buddhist, Taoist, and Chinese folk religion deities. The Mengjia Longshan Temple, built in 1738 and located in the Wanhua District, demonstrates an example of architecture with southern Chinese influences commonly seen on older buildings in Taiwan.


Xinsheng South Road is known as the "Road to Heaven" due to its high concentration of temples, shrines, churches, and mosques.[75][76] Other famous temples include Baoan Temple located in historic Dalongdong, a national historical site, and Xiahai City God Temple, located in the old Dadaocheng community, constructed with architecture similar to temples in southern Fujian.[77] The Taipei Confucius Temple traces its history back to 1879 during the Qing Dynasty and also incorporates southern Fujian-style architecture.[78]


Besides large temples, small outdoor shrines to local deities are very common and can be seen on road sides, parks, and neighborhoods. Many homes and businesses may also set up small shrines of candles, figurines, and offerings. Some restaurants, for example, may set up a small shrine to the Kitchen God for success in a restaurant business.[79]





New Year's Eve fireworks at Taipei 101



Festivals and events


Many yearly festivals are held in Taipei. In recent years some festivals, such as the Double Ten Day fireworks and concerts, are increasingly hosted on a rotating basis by a number of cities around Taiwan.


When New Year's Eve arrives on the solar calendar, thousands of people converge on Taipei's Xinyi District for parades, outdoor concerts by popular artists, street shows, round-the clock nightlife. The high point is the countdown to midnight, when Taipei 101 assumes the role of the world's largest fireworks platform.[citation needed]


The Taipei Lantern Festival concludes the Lunar New Year holiday. The timing of the city's lantern exhibit coincides with the national festival in Pingxi, when thousands of fire lanterns are released into the sky.[80] The city's lantern exhibit rotates among different downtown locales from year to year, including Liberty Square, Taipei 101, and Zhongshan Hall in Ximending.


On Double Ten Day, patriotic celebrations are held in front of the Presidential Building. Other annual festivals include Ancestors Day (Tomb-Sweeping Day), the Dragon Boat Festival, the Ghost Festival, and the Mid-Autumn Festival (Moon Festival).[80]


Taipei regularly hosts its share of international events. The city recently hosted the 2009 Summer Deaflympics.[81] This event was followed by the Taipei International Flora Exposition, a garden festival hosted from November 2010 to April 2011. The Floral Expo was the first of its kind to take place in Taiwan and only the seventh hosted in Asia; the expo admitted 110,000 visitors on 27 February 2011.



Taipei in films


Note: The list below is not a complete list, they are examples of more notable movies filmed in the city.





  • Luc Besson's Lucy (action/scifi/drama)


  • Arvin Chen's Au Revoir Taipei (comedy)


  • Chen Kuo-fu's Double Vision (horror/suspense)


  • Chen Kuo-fu's The Personals (drama/romance)


  • Jay Chou's Secret (romance)


  • Leon Dai's No Puedo Vivir Sin Ti (drama)


  • Hou Hsiao-hsien's Dust in the Wind (drama)


  • Adam Kane and Will Tiao's Formosa Betrayed (political thriller)


  • Andrew Lau's Young and Dangerous 2 (Hong Kong studio, filmed on location in Taipei)


  • Lau Kar-wing's The Dragon Family (Hong Kong studio, filmed in Hong Kong and Taipei) (Action)[citation needed]


  • Ang Lee's Eat Drink Man Woman (drama)


  • Lin Cheng-sheng's Betelnut beauty (drama/romance)


  • Morgan Matthews's X+Y (drama)


  • Doze Niu's Monga (drama/action)

  • Shimoyama Ten, Yee Chin-yen & Zhang Yibai's About Love (Japanese studio, filmed on three cities in Asia: Taipei, Tokyo, and Shanghai)


  • Takahisa Zeze's Moon Child (Japanese studio, filmed in Taipei, as the futuristic city of Mallepa) (drama)


  • Johnnie To & Wai Ka-Fai's Turn Left, Turn Right (Hong Kong studio, filmed on location in Taipei)


  • Tsai Ming-liang's Rebels of the Neon God (drama)

  • Renpei Tsukamoto's One Missed Call 2 (Japanese studio, filmed in Taipei and Jinguashi)[citation needed]


  • Wei Te-sheng's Cape No. 7 (drama/comedy)


  • Robert Wise's The Sand Pebbles (Hollywood studio, filmed in Taipei, Keelung, Tamsui and Hong Kong) (drama)


  • John Woo's A Better Tomorrow (Hong Kong studio, filmed in Hong Kong and Taipei) (action)


  • Wong Kar-wai's Happy Together (Hong Kong studio, filmed in three cities : Buenos Aires, Hong Kong, and Taipei)


  • Kirk Wong's Crime Story (Hong Kong studio, filmed in Hong Kong, Taipei) (action)


  • Edward Yang's Yi Yi (drama)


  • Yee Chin-yen's Blue Gate Crossing (romance)




Government







Taipei City Hall





Taipei City Council





Ko Wen-je, the incumbent Mayor of Taipei.


Taipei City is a special municipality which is directly under the Executive Yuan (Central Government) of ROC. The mayor of Taipei City had been an appointed position since Taipei's conversion to a centrally administered municipality in 1967 until the first public election was held in 1994.[82] The position has a four-year term and is elected by direct popular vote. The first elected mayor was Chen Shui-bian of the Democratic Progressive Party. Ma Ying-jeou took office in 1998 for two terms, before handing it over to Hau Lung-pin who won the 2006 mayoral election on 9 December 2006.[83] Both Chen Shui-bian and Ma Ying-Jeou went on to become President of the Republic of China. The incumbent mayor, Ko Wen-je, was elected on 29 November 2014 and took office on 25 December 2014.[84]


Based on the outcomes of previous elections in the past decade, the vote of the overall constituency of Taipei City shows a slight inclination towards the pro-KMT camp (the Pan-Blue Coalition);[85] however, the pro-DPP camp (the Pan-Green Coalition) also has considerable support.[86]


Ketagalan Boulevard, where the Presidential Office Building and other government structures are situated, is often the site of mass gatherings such as inauguration and national holiday parades, receptions for visiting dignitaries, political demonstrations,[87][88] and public festivals.[89]



Garbage recycling


Taipei City is also famous for its effort in garbage recycling, which has become such a good international precedent that other countries have sent teams to study the recycling system. After the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) established a program in 1998 combining the efforts of communities, a financial resource named the Recycling Fund was made available to recycling companies and waste collectors. The EPA also introduced garbage recycling trucks, in effort to raise community recycling awareness, that broadcast classical music to announce its arrival to the community.[90] Manufacturers, vendors and importers of recyclable waste pay fees to the Fund, which uses the money to set firm prices for recyclables and subsidize local recycling efforts. Between 1998 and 2008, the recycling rate increased from 6 percent to 32 percent.[91] This improvement enabled the government of Taipei to demonstrate its recycling system to the world at the Shanghai World Expo 2010.



Administrative divisions


Taipei City is divided up into 12 administrative districts (; ).[92] Each district is further divided up into urban villages (), which are further sub-divided up into neighborhoods ().










































































































































Map District Population
(Jan. 2016)
Area
(km2)
Postal
code
Name Chinese Pinyin Wade–Giles
Pe̍h-ōe-jī



Beitou
北投區 Běitóu Pei-t'ou Pak-tâu
257,922 56.8216 112

Da'an
大安區 Dà'ān Ta-an Tāi-an
312,909 11.3614 106

Datong
大同區 Dàtóng Ta-t'ung Tāi-tông
131,029 5.6815 103

Nangang
南港區 Nángǎng Nan-kang Lâm-káng
122,296 21.8424 115

Neihu
內湖區 Nèihú Nei-hu Lāi-ô͘
287,726 31.5787 114

Shilin
士林區 Shìlín Shih-lin Sū-lîm
290,682 62.3682 111

Songshan
松山區 Sōngshān Sung-shan Siông-san
209,689 9.2878 105

Wanhua
萬華區 Wànhuá Wan-hua Báng-kah
194,314 8.8522 108

Wenshan
文山區 Wénshān Wen-shan Bûn-san
275,433 31.5090 116

Xinyi
信義區 Xìnyì Hsin-yi Sìn-gī
229,139 11.2077 110

Zhongshan
中山區 Zhōngshān Chung-shan Tiong-san
231,286 13.6821 104

Zhongzheng
中正區 Zhōngzhèng Chung-cheng Tiong-chèng
162,549 7.6071 100


City planning


The city is characterized by straight roads and public buildings of grand Western architectural styles.[93] The city is built on a square grid configuration, however these blocks are huge by international standards with 500 m (1,640.42 ft) sides. The area in between these blocks are infilled with lanes and alleys, which provide access to quieter residential or mixed-use development. Other than a citywide 30 kilometres per hour (19 mph) speed limit, there is little uniform planning within this "hidden" area; therefore lanes (perpendicular to streets) and alleys (parallel with street, or conceptually, perpendicular to the lane) spill out from the main throughways. These minor roads are not always perpendicular and sometimes cut through the block diagonally.


Although development began in the western districts (still considered the cultural heart of the city) of the city due to trade, the eastern districts of the city have become the focus of recent development projects. Many of the western districts, already in decline, have become targets of new urban renewal initiatives.[93]



Transportation




Platform of Wende Station on the Taipei Metro system.


Public transport accounts for a substantial portion of different modes of transport in Taiwan, with Taipei residents having the highest utilization rate at 34.1%.[94]Private transport consists of motor scooters, private cars, taxi cabs, and bicycles. Motor-scooters often weave between cars and occasionally through oncoming traffic. Respect for traffic laws, once scant, has improved with deployment of traffic cameras and increasing numbers of police roadblocks checking riders for alcohol consumption and other offenses.


Taipei Station serves as the comprehensive hub for the subway, bus, conventional rail, and high-speed rail.[95] A contactless smartcard, known as EasyCard, can be used for all modes of public transit as well as several retail outlets. It contains credits that are deducted each time a ride is taken.[96] The EasyCard is read via proximity sensory panels on buses and in MRT stations, and it does not need to be removed from one's wallet or purse.



Metro



Taipei's public transport system, the Taipei Metro (commonly referred to as the MRT), incorporates a metro and light rail system based on advanced VAL and Bombardier technology. There are currently five metro lines that are labelled in three ways: color, line number and depot station name. In addition to the rapid transit system itself, the Taipei Metro also includes several public facilities such as the Maokong Gondola, underground shopping malls, parks, and public squares. Modifications to existing railway lines to integrate them into the metro system are underway.


In 2017 a rapid transit line was opened to connect Taipei with Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport and Taoyuan City. The new line is part of the new Taoyuan Metro system.




Taipei Railway Station front



Rail



Beginning in 1983, surface rail lines in the city were moved underground as part of the Taipei Railway Underground Project.[97] The Taiwan High Speed Rail system opened in 2007. The bullet trains connect Taipei with the west coast cities of New Taipei, Taoyuan, Hsinchu, Taichung, Chiayi, and Tainan before terminating at Zuoying (Kaohsiung) at speeds that cut travel times by 60% or more from what they normally are on a bus or conventional train.[98] The Taiwan Railway Administration also runs passenger and freight services throughout the entire island.



Bus



An extensive city bus system serves metropolitan areas not covered by the metro, with exclusive bus lanes to facilitate transportation.[95] Riders of the city metro system are able to use the EasyCard for discounted fares on buses, and vice versa. A unique feature of the Taipei bus system is the joint venture of private transportation companies that operate the system's routes while sharing the fare system. This route is in sharp contrast to bus systems in the U.S. which are mostly public entities. Several major intercity bus terminals are located throughout the city, including the Taipei Bus Station and Taipei City Hall Bus Station.[99]




Taipei Songshan Airport



Airports



Most scheduled international flights are served by Taoyuan International Airport in nearby Taoyuan City. Taipei Songshan Airport, at the heart of the city in the Songshan District, serves domestic flights and scheduled flights to Haneda Airport in Tokyo, Gimpo International Airport in Seoul, and about 15 destinations in the People's Republic of China. Songshan Airport is accessible by the Taipei Metro Neihu Line; Taoyuan International Airport is accessible by the Taoyuan Airport MRT.



Ticketing


In 1994, with the rapid development of Taipei, a white paper for transport policies expressed the strong objective to "create a civilised transport system for the people of Taipei." In 1999, they chose Mitac consortium, which Thales-Transportation Systems is part of. Thales was then selected again in 2005 to deploy an upgrade of Taipei's public transport network with an end-to-end and fully contactless automatic fare collection solution that integrates 116 metro stations, 5,000 buses and 92 car parks.[citation needed]



Education





West Site of National Taiwan University Hospital


Taipei is home to the campuses of 24 universities and Academia Sinica, Taiwan's national academy which supports the Taiwan International Graduate Program:








  • Academia Sinica (1928/1949)


  • National Taiwan University (1928)


  • National Chengchi University (1927)


  • National Defense Medical Center (1902)


  • National Defense University (1906)


  • National Taipei University (1949)


  • National Taipei University of Business (1917)


  • National Taipei University of Education (1895)


  • National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Science (1947)


  • National Taiwan University of Science and Technology (1974)


  • National Taipei University of Technology (1912)


  • National Taiwan College of Performing Arts (1957)


  • National Taiwan Normal University (1922/1946)


  • National Yang-Ming University (1975)


  • Taipei National University of the Arts (1982)


  • University of Taipei (2013)





  • Tamkang University (1950)


  • Soochow University (1900)


  • Chinese Culture University (1962)


  • Ming Chuan University (1957)


  • Shih Hsin University (1956)


  • Shih Chien University (1958)


  • Taipei Medical University (1960)


  • Tatung University (1956)


  • China University of Technology (1965)



National Taiwan University (NTU or Tai-Da) was established in 1928 during the period of Japanese colonial rule. NTU has produced many political and social leaders in Taiwan. Both pan-blue and pan-green movements in Taiwan are rooted on the NTU campus. The university has six campuses in the greater Taipei region (including New Taipei) and two additional campuses in Nantou County. The university governs farms, forests, and hospitals for educational and research purposes. The main campus is in Taipei's Da-An district, where most department buildings and all the administrative buildings are located. The College of Law and the College of Medicine are located near the Presidential Building. The National Taiwan University Hospital is a leading international center of medical research.[100]


National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU or Shi-Da) likewise traces its origins to the Japanese colonial period. Founded as Taihoku College in 1922 and organized as a teacher training institution by the Kuomintang in 1946, NTNU has since developed into a comprehensive international university. The university boasts especially strong programs in the humanities and international education. Worldwide it is perhaps best known as home of the Mandarin Training Center, a program that offers Mandarin language training each year to over a thousand students from scores of countries throughout the world. The main campus, in Taipei's Da'an district near MRT Guting Station, is known for its historic architecture. The Shida market area surrounding this campus takes its name from the school's portmanteau.



Notable Mandarin language programs for foreigners




  • International Chinese Language Program (ICLP) (國際華語研習所) of National Taiwan University


  • Mandarin Training Center (MTC) (國語教學中心) of National Taiwan Normal University


  • Taipei Language Institute (中華語文研習所)



Sports





Taipei Arena





Tianmu Baseball Stadium


Due to Taiwan being under American and Japanese influence over the years, the sports of baseball in particular and basketball have become popular in the city. Taipei, like the rest of the country, has featured most prominently in baseball and has often been the venue for the Asian Baseball Championship since the 1960s. The best doubles (tennis) player in the world Chan Yung-Jan is from Taipei too.



Major sporting events


Below is a list of recent sporting events hosted by the city:



  • 2001 Asian Baseball Championship

  • 2001 Baseball World Cup

  • 2001 AFC Women's Championship

  • 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship

  • 2007 Baseball World Cup

  • 2009 Summer Deaflympics

  • 2015 WBSC Premier12

  • 2017 William Jones Cup

  • 2017 Summer Universiade


The Taipei Arena is located at the site of the former Taipei Municipal Baseball Stadium (demolished in 2000), with a capacity of over 15,000. Designed by Archasia, the arena was opened on 1 December 2005. Since its opening in 2005, the arena has held more art and cultural activities (such as live concerts) than sporting events, which it was originally designed and built for. The main arena has an adjustable floor space: its minimum floor space is 60 m × 30 m (196.85 ft × 98.43 ft), and can be extended to 80 m × 40 m (262.47 ft × 131.23 ft). The Chinese Taipei Ice Hockey League (CIHL) plays out of the auxiliary arena, which is a 60 m × 30 m (196.85 ft × 98.43 ft) ice skating rink.


The Tianmu Baseball Stadium is the major baseball venue in Taipei.


Taipei has the only football-specific stadium in Taiwan, Zhongshan Soccer Stadium, which hosts the national football team. It hosts qualifiers for the FIFA World and AFC regional cups, and finals of school football tournaments. Since there are no professional football leagues in Taiwan, no other sporting events are held there, since 2009, the Taipei Stadium hosts the Soccer and Athletic events.



Youth baseball


In 2010, a Taipei baseball team—Chung-Ching Junior Little League—won the Junior League World Series, after winning the Asia-Pacific Region, then defeating the Mexico Region and Latin America Region champions to become the International champion, and finally defeating the U.S. champion (Southwest Region), Rose Capital East LL (Tyler, Texas), 9–1.[citation needed]. Its Little League World Series international team has won 17 championships, the most wins in the league.[101]



Media




TVBS-G produces programs mainly from their Nangang building in Taipei City.


As the capital, Taipei City is the headquarters for many television and radio stations in Taiwan and the center of some of the country's largest newspapers.



Television


Television stations located in Taipei include the CTS Education and Culture, CTS Recreation, CTV MyLife, CTV News Channel, China Television, Chinese Television System, Chung T'ien Television, Dimo TV, Eastern Television, Era Television, FTV News, Follow Me TV, Formosa TV, Gala Television, Public Television Service, SET Metro, SET News, SET Taiwan, Sanlih E-Television, Shuang Xing, TTV Family, TTV Finance, TTV World, TVBS, TVBS-G, TVBS-NEWS, Taiwan Broadcasting System, Videoland Television Network and Taiwan Television.



Newspapers


Newspapers include Apple Daily, Central Daily News, The China Post, China Times, DigiTimes, Kinmen Daily News, Liberty Times, Mandarin Daily News, Matsu Daily, Min Sheng Bao, Sharp Daily, Taipei Times, Taiwan Daily, Taiwan News, Taiwan Times and United Daily News.



International relations


Taipei is a member of the Asian Network of Major Cities 21.




Twin towns and sister cities


Taipei is twinned with:[102][103]









  • Houston, TX, United States (1961)


  • Lomé, Togo (1966)


  • Manila, Philippines (1966)


  • Cotonou, Benin (1967)


  • South Vietnam Saigon, South Vietnam (1968) (now Vietnam Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam)[104]


  • Quezon City, Philippines (1968)


  • Seoul, South Korea (1968)[105][106]


  • San Francisco, CA, United States (1970)


  • Bandera de la Provincia Distrito Nacional.png Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (1970)


  • Guam, United States (1973)


  • Cleveland, OH, United States (1975)[107]


  • Tegucigalpa, Honduras (1975)


  • Indianapolis, IN, United States (1978)


  • Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (1978)


  • Marshall, TX, United States (1978)


  • Atlanta, GA, United States (1979)


  • Los Angeles, CA, United States (1979)


  • Phoenix, AZ, United States (1979)[108]





  • Oklahoma City, OK, United States (1981)


  • Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia (1982)


  • Johannesburg, South Africa (1982)


  • Pretoria, South Africa (1983)


  • Lilongwe, Malawi (1984)


  • San José, Costa Rica (1984)


  • Versailles, France (1986)


  • Asunción, Paraguay (1987)


  • Panama City, Panama (1989)


  • Managua, Nicaragua (1992)


  • San Salvador, El Salvador (1993)


  • Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland (1995)[109]


  • Ulan-Ude, Buryatia, Russia (1996)


  • Banjul, Gambia (1997)


  • Bissau, Guinea-Bissau (1997)


  • Boston, MA, United States (1997)


  • Dakar, Senegal (1997)





  • Dallas, TX, United States (1997)[110]


  • La Paz, Bolivia (1997)


  • Mbabane, Swaziland (1997)


  • San Nicolás, Nuevo León, Mexico (1997)


  • Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia (1997)


  • Guatemala City, Guatemala (1998)


  • Majuro, Marshall Islands (1998)


  • Monrovia, Liberia (1998)


  • Vilnius, Lithuania (1998)


  • Riga, Latvia (2001)[111]


  • Malabon, Philippines (2005)


  • Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso (2008)


  • Daegu, South Korea (2010)


  • Prague, Czech Republic[112]




Partner cities




  • Anchorage, AK, United States (1997)[103]


  • Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan (2006)


  • Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, Japan (2014)


  • Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia (2017)[113]



Friendship cities




  • Perth, Western Australia, Australia (1999)[103]


  • Orange County, CA, United States (2000)[103]


  • George Town, Penang, Malaysia (2009)


  • Helsinki, Finland (2012)[103]



In popular culture


  • Taipei's name is used in a professional wrestling match named the "Taipei Deathmatch" in which where the wrestlers' fists are taped and dipped into glue and in broken and crushed glass, allowing shards to stick to their fists. This match can be won by pinfall, submission or escape.[114]


Gallery





See also



  • Taipei-Keelung Metropolitan Area

  • List of districts of Taipei by area

  • List of districts of Taipei by population

  • List of districts of Taipei by population density


  • List of most expensive cities for expatriate employees (#61 in the world)

  • List of schools in Taipei


  • Taipei Community Services Center (offers support services to the international community)



Notes





  1. ^ Also the capital city of Taiwan Province, claimed by the People's Republic of China




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External links




  • Taipei City Government official website

  • Taipei City Council






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Capital of the Republic of China
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