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Audiotour Taichung City: Die Skyline-Symphonie von Taichung

Audioguide11 Stopps

In Taichung verbergen selbst die futuristischsten Theater und Regierungspaläste Geschichten aus vergangenen Jahrhunderten. Irgendwo hinter glattem Glas und Wassergärten wechselte die Macht den Besitzer, Künstler rebellierten und geheime Codes wurden durch verborgene Korridore weitergegeben. Diese selbstgeführte Audiotour enthüllt unerzählte Geschichten, während Sie das Herz von Huilai erkunden. Wandern Sie frei umher und hören Sie, was die meisten Besucher verpassen – Skandale, die einst die Stadt erschütterten, Echos politischer Intrigen und kleine Momente des Genies, die das Stadtleben für immer prägten. Wer verschwand in der Eröffnungsnacht des Nationalen Taichung Theaters während eines Regensturms? Welche ungelöste Botschaft bleibt unter den Steinstufen des Fountain Palace eingraviert? Warum riskierte ein Beamter alles für ein Nachmittagstreffen im Rathaus von Taichung? Schreiten Sie von Wahrzeichen zu Wahrzeichen, während sich Taichung neu offenbart. Schicht für Schicht regt sich Drama unter modernen Fassaden und wartet darauf, durch jede Geschichte, die Sie entdecken, aufzusteigen. Treten Sie jetzt vor. Lassen Sie sich von diesen Straßen eine Stadt zeigen, die Sie sich nie vorgestellt haben.

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Über diese Tour

  • schedule
    Dauer 30–50 minsEigenes Tempo
  • straighten
    3.3 km FußwegDem geführten Pfad folgen
  • location_on
    StandortTaichung, Taiwan
  • wifi_off
    Funktioniert offlineEinmal herunterladen, überall nutzen
  • all_inclusive
    Lebenslanger ZugriffJederzeit wiederholen, für immer
  • location_on
    Startet bei Nationales Taichung Theater

Stopps auf dieser Tour

  1. In front of you is a low, bright-white building with smooth, curving “cut-out” shapes and big glass openings, sitting in a wide plaza with a shallow circular pool. This is the…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    In front of you is a low, bright-white building with smooth, curving “cut-out” shapes and big glass openings, sitting in a wide plaza with a shallow circular pool. This is the National Taichung Theater, and it looks less like a boxy opera house and more like someone draped a modern art sculpture over a performance hall... then made it 57,685 square meters big. The idea goes way back to 1992, when Taiwan first floated a “National Musical House.” Taichung pushed hard in 2002, and by 2003 the city had put 6 billion Taiwan dollars on the table, about 183 million US dollars at the time... roughly around 300 million in today’s money. In 2009, Japanese architect Toyo Ito teamed up with engineer Cecil Balmond to turn that ambition into a real building. After a partial opening in 2014, it actually closed in 2015 for extra safety work... because even beautiful buildings should not accidentally eat visitors. It officially opened in 2016, then joined the National Performing Arts Center network that same year. Ready for City Center Plaza? Walk west for about 10 minutes.

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  2. On your left, look for the tall, dark-glass tower with sharp zigzag edges, rising from a bright white base with big blue signage. This is City Center Plaza, or 豐邑市政都心廣場... and…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, look for the tall, dark-glass tower with sharp zigzag edges, rising from a bright white base with big blue signage. This is City Center Plaza, or 豐邑市政都心廣場... and it’s basically the 7th Redevelopment Zone’s way of saying, “Yes, we do business up here.” Politely. Very, very high up. The building tops out at about 168 meters, with 38 floors above ground-stacked like sleek, tinted layers-and then, because Taichung loves efficiency, six more basement levels tucked underneath. That’s a whole hidden world of parking, services, and building guts humming away while the offices upstairs stay calm and glossy. With around 92,496 square meters of floor space, it’s less “one building” and more “vertical neighborhood,” and as of late 2020 it ranked as Taichung’s fifth-tallest-Taiwan’s twenty-third. Not bad for a plaza. Ready for Art Deco Landmark? Walk northwest for about 3 minutes.

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  3. On your right, look for the tall, pale stone-colored tower with stepped Art Deco “crown” details at the roofline and long vertical window bays running straight up the face. This…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your right, look for the tall, pale stone-colored tower with stepped Art Deco “crown” details at the roofline and long vertical window bays running straight up the face. This is the Art Deco Landmark, or 富宇世界之匯... a 32-story residential skyscraper that topped out in 2018 at about 133 meters. It’s got that old-school, Jazz Age confidence-sharp lines, stacked geometry, and a top that looks a little like it’s wearing a fancy hat. But don’t let the style fool you: this place was built for Taiwan’s no-nonsense reality. Earthquakes and typhoons are regular visitors, so the engineering had to be strict-less “pretty façade,” more “please don’t wobble.” Underneath you are six basement levels, and above you are 113 apartment homes packed into about 31,537 square meters of floor space. As of 2021, it ranked around 35th tallest in Taichung-still tall enough to make your neck file a complaint. When you’re ready, Global Strategy Center is a 3-minute walk heading southeast.

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  1. Look to your right for a tall, glassy blue-green tower with a bright white vertical strip running up the front like a crisp spine against the sky. This is the Global Strategy…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    Look to your right for a tall, glassy blue-green tower with a bright white vertical strip running up the front like a crisp spine against the sky. This is the Global Strategy Center, known locally as 豐邑 A8 市政核心... which sounds like it should come with a secret handshake. Up close, you can hear the city in layers: scooters buzzing, air conditioners humming, and the soft wind skimming along all that glass. It rises 169.5 meters, stacking 38 floors above ground, plus a surprising seven basement levels below-because in Taiwan, even the underground works overtime. By December 2020, it had muscled its way into the number four spot among Taichung’s tallest buildings, and number twenty-two in all of Taiwan. And with about 74,000 square meters of floor space, there’s plenty of room inside for big plans... and very small coffee breaks. When you’re set, The Landmark (Taichung) is an 11-minute walk heading northeast.

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  2. On your left, look for the tall, clean-edged tower with thin vertical window lines and a pale beige frame that makes it stand out against the sky. This is The Landmark,…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, look for the tall, clean-edged tower with thin vertical window lines and a pale beige frame that makes it stand out against the sky. This is The Landmark, officially 聯聚中雍大廈, and it’s basically Xitun District’s way of saying, “Yes, we do tall too.” At 192 meters, it claimed the top spot in Taichung by late 2020, and it still feels like a confident exclamation point on the skyline. Up close, the design is calmer than flashy: a long, steady rectangle, with the corners shaved into gentle curves so the whole thing doesn’t look like it’s trying to pick a fight with the clouds. The architects took inspiration from a traditional Chinese comb... which is a classy little detail, considering this building has 39 floors above ground and seven basement levels below, like it’s combing the city from top to bottom. Notice the beige granite, the gray glass, and those darker metal accents... all very “sharp suit, quiet voice.” When you’re set, Treasure Garden is a 6-minute walk heading northwest.

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  3. On your left, look up for a tall, pale tower with sharp, fin-like edges and a slim strip of glass balconies running up the middle, cutting into that bright blue sky. This is…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, look up for a tall, pale tower with sharp, fin-like edges and a slim strip of glass balconies running up the middle, cutting into that bright blue sky. This is Treasure Garden, or 寶格 (Bǎo gé), a residential skyscraper in Taichung’s Xitun District... and it has serious “quiet luxury” energy. It was designed by the Italian firm Antonio Citterio Patricia Viel and Partners, the kind of team that makes buildings feel tailored-like someone took a ruler to the skyline and said, “Let’s keep it crisp.” At 160 meters tall-about 39 floors above you, plus six basement levels below-this place is basically a small vertical neighborhood stacked like a very expensive layer cake. Because who wouldn’t want SIX basement levels? As of late 2020, it ranked as Taichung’s ninth tallest, and twenty-ninth in all of Taiwan-high enough to feel removed from street noise, but still close enough to smell dinner drifting up on a humid night. When you’re ready, La Bella Vita is a 3-minute walk heading southwest.

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  4. On your left, La Bella Vita rises as a split twin-tower with long horizontal balcony bands and a dark, honeycomb-like spine running up the center. This is La Bella Vita, also…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, La Bella Vita rises as a split twin-tower with long horizontal balcony bands and a dark, honeycomb-like spine running up the center. This is La Bella Vita, also called Huizhong Road Tower... a 128-meter residential high-rise with 33 floors above ground and a surprising six basement levels below. That’s a lot of building hiding underground, like it’s storing secrets... or just a truly committed parking situation. It was designed by the Milan team Antonio Citterio Patricia Viel and Partners, and you can feel that Italy-meets-Taiwan idea in the way it’s put together. The tower isn’t one clean, simple block. It’s stacked volumes that look slightly offset, like pieces that shouldn’t fit... but do. That’s on purpose: it’s meant to echo Taiwan’s dramatic rock formations. Look at the façade: those crystalline, honeycomb-style windows are there to pull in natural light, framing city views for 168 homes as this whole district races upward. When you’re ready, Fountain Palace is about a 3-minute walk heading southwest.

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  5. On your left, look up for the tall, pale tower with a stepped crown and little cutout details near the top, rising behind the lower blocky building in front. This is Fountain…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, look up for the tall, pale tower with a stepped crown and little cutout details near the top, rising behind the lower blocky building in front. This is Fountain Palace, a residential skyscraper in Taichung’s Xitun District... and yes, despite the name, it’s mostly about living high, not getting splashed. Completed in 2010, it climbs about 155 meters, stacking 39 floors above ground like neatly filed paperwork-except the “files” are homes with views. And below all that? Five basement levels, the hidden world where the building keeps its secrets: cars, storage, and the kind of quiet hum you only notice when everything’s working. It was designed by C.Y. Lee & Partners, a firm known for going big and making it look intentional. Notice how the top isn’t flat-it’s dressed up, like the building put on a formal hat for the skyline. Because even apartments like to make an entrance. When you’re set, Taichung City Government is a 3-minute walk heading south.

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  6. On your left, look for the wide, blue-glass government building set back behind a big open plaza, with a low stone sign in front that reads “TAICHUNG CITY GOVERNMENT” in gold…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, look for the wide, blue-glass government building set back behind a big open plaza, with a low stone sign in front that reads “TAICHUNG CITY GOVERNMENT” in gold letters. This is Taichung City Government-the place where the city’s big decisions get stamped, filed, debated, re-debated… and eventually turned into policy. The story starts in 1920, when Japanese colonial authorities set up the city government and built an early city hall in 1911. After 1945, control shifted to the Republic of China, and Taichung was reorganized as a provincial city government. Then came the modern era: this current city hall opened on October 10, 2010-right on Taiwan’s National Day, because symbolism is a favorite local hobby. A couple months later, on December 25, Taichung City merged with Taichung County and leveled up into a special municipality-meaning a LOT more departments, from fire and health to tourism, water, and urban development. When you’re set, Cosmos (skyscraper) is a 4-minute walk heading northwest.

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  7. On your right, look up past the long blue construction fence for a tall, slim residential tower with stacked balconies and a little “cap” at the top. This is Cosmos, known in…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your right, look up past the long blue construction fence for a tall, slim residential tower with stacked balconies and a little “cap” at the top. This is Cosmos, known in Chinese as 寶璽天睿, rising out of Taichung’s 7th Redevelopment Zone like a confident exclamation point. Construction kicked off in 2012 and wrapped in 2018... six years of planning, building, and probably a few “are we there yet?” meetings. The finished stats are the kind developers love: about 149.65 meters tall, 38 floors above you, and four basement levels below-because in Taiwan, even the ground gets used efficiently. What’s really fun is the design team: Japan’s Masatoshi Katayama, Canada’s Michael Green, plus KYDO. And inside, the lobby goes full “don’t touch anything”: a 10.6-meter-high hall with Asia’s only ARS Murano glass chandelier, built from 120 handmade pieces and priced around 400,000 euros… roughly 440,000 dollars today. It even snagged a European design award in 2019. When you’re ready, Royal Landmark Tower is a 2-minute walk heading southwest.

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  8. On your left, spot the tall, pale-beige tower with a chunky, crown-like top and neat rows of windows catching the sun against that clean blue sky. This is the Royal Landmark…Mehr lesenWeniger anzeigen

    On your left, spot the tall, pale-beige tower with a chunky, crown-like top and neat rows of windows catching the sun against that clean blue sky. This is the Royal Landmark Tower, known in Chinese as 總太東方帝國... which loosely sounds like it should come with a royal decree and a dragon stamp. It’s actually a residential skyscraper here in Xitun District, finished in 2010, when Taichung was leaning hard into its modern skyline era. At 158 meters, with 38 floors above ground, it climbed into the short list of the city’s tallest places to live... not just to work, shop, or pose for selfies. Because nothing says “cozy home” like being stacked 38 stories into the sky. Look up at those repeating balconies and window grids... it’s the architecture of everyday life, elevated-literally-into a statement of arrival for this part of Huilai.

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Häufig gestellte Fragen

Wie starte ich die Tour?

Laden Sie nach dem Kauf die AudaTours-App herunter und geben Sie Ihren Einlösecode ein. Die Tour ist sofort startbereit – tippen Sie einfach auf „Play“ und folgen Sie der GPS-geführten Route.

Benötige ich während der Tour Internet?

Nein! Laden Sie die Tour vor dem Start herunter und genießen Sie sie vollständig offline. Nur die Chat-Funktion benötigt Internet. Wir empfehlen den Download über WLAN, um mobiles Datenvolumen zu sparen.

Handelt es sich um eine geführte Gruppentour?

Nein – dies ist ein selbstgeführter Audioguide. Sie erkunden unabhängig in Ihrem eigenen Tempo, wobei die Audioerzählung über Ihr Telefon abgespielt wird. Kein Reiseleiter, keine Gruppe, kein Zeitplan.

Wie lange dauert die Tour?

Die meisten Touren dauern 60–90 Minuten, aber Sie kontrollieren das Tempo vollständig. Pausieren Sie, überspringen Sie Stopps oder machen Sie Pausen, wann immer Sie wollen.

Was, wenn ich die Tour heute nicht beenden kann?

Kein Problem! Touren haben lebenslangen Zugriff. Pausieren Sie und setzen Sie sie fort, wann immer Sie möchten – morgen, nächste Woche oder nächstes Jahr. Ihr Fortschritt wird gespeichert.

Welche Sprachen sind verfügbar?

Alle Touren sind in über 50 Sprachen verfügbar. Wählen Sie Ihre bevorzugte Sprache beim Einlösen Ihres Codes. Hinweis: Die Sprache kann nach der Tour-Generierung nicht mehr geändert werden.

Wo greife ich nach dem Kauf auf die Tour zu?

Laden Sie die kostenlose AudaTours-App aus dem App Store oder von Google Play herunter. Geben Sie Ihren Einlösecode (per E-Mail gesendet) ein, und die Tour erscheint in Ihrer Bibliothek, bereit zum Download und Start.

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