Taipei OverviewTaipei, the capital of the island nation of Taiwan, is hot,
crowded, chaotic and cosmopolitan, one of the Asian 'tiger' cities
that throbs with life day and night. The city skyscrapers reach up
from a basin in the north of Taiwan, which is separated from the
Chinese mainland by the narrow Formosa Strait. For decades the
recognition of the independence of Taiwan has been an issue
domestically and internationally, and the dispute is still
simmering. Taipei itself has grown from a swampy farming settlement
into a modern metropolis in an extraordinarily short time, most of
this development having taken place since World War II. The latest
engineering feat to grace the city's ever-rising skyline is the
soaring Taipei 101 tower (so-named because of its 101 floors),
which not only serves as an amazing tourist attraction for those
with a head for heights, but is also the city's international
financial centre. Down on the ground the districts of Taipei swarm
with a conglomeration of cultures going about their business in
streets choked with unruly traffic. The city is packed with
excellent restaurants (it is renowned among gourmands), magnificent
hotels, glitzy shopping malls, wonderful museums, temples, spas and
peaceful gardens. As the sun goes down the night markets open up,
usually packed with tourists and bargain-hunters who throng the
alleyways in the heavy, humid night air. Taipei is also crammed with bars and nightclubs, and its red
light district in Zhong Shan is one of the most legendary in Asia.
When the city becomes too stifling, visitors can head for the hills
to the north west to relax at one of the spas built to utilise the
Bei Tou area's hot springs, or take a hike through the Yang Ming
Shan National Park. |