Taipei North Gate
Constructed in 1884, Taipei North Gate (Chinese: 臺北府城北門), formally Cheng'en Gate (Chinese: 承恩門), is the best-preserved gate of the Walls of Taipei, and is a National Monument of Taiwan. [1][2][3] Important in the Qing layout of the city, restoring it to visual prominence in the city has been a feature of recent urban planning. [4] [5] It gives its name to Beimen metro station.
References[]
- ^ https://nchdb.boch.gov.tw/assets/overview/monument/19980903000001
- ^ "Taipei City Wall-North Gate (Cheng'en Gate) | Taipei Travel". travel.taipei. Retrieved 2021-09-15.
- ^ "The North Gate Taipei – the Gate Through the Past | We Fun Taiwan 一起玩台灣". wefuntaiwan.com. Retrieved 2021-09-15.
- ^ "第二階段規劃".
- ^ CHIU, Kuo-wei. "Urban Transconfiguration of a Colonial-Modern City: Towards Inclusive Historical Metamorphosis."
Coordinates: 25°02′52″N 121°30′40″E / 25.04772°N 121.51121°E
Categories:
- Buildings and structures completed in 1884
- Buildings and structures in Taipei
- City walls in Taiwan
- History of Taipei
- Taiwanese building and structure stubs