Soulangh Cultural Park

The Soulangh Cultural Park (Chinese: 蕭壠文化園區; pinyin: Xiāolǒng Wénhuà Yuánqū) is a multi-purpose park in Jiali District, Tainan, Taiwan.

Soulangh Cultural Park
蕭壠文化園區
Former namesJiali Sugar Factory
General information
TypeFormer sugar factory
LocationJiali, Tainan, Taiwan
Coordinates23°10′23.5″N 120°10′45.2″E
Completed1906
Opened2005
Technical details
Floor area13.8 hectares

History

The cultural park was originally built as Jiali Sugar Factory or Soulangh Sugar Refinery in 1906 during the Japanese rule of Taiwan.[1] The factory was closed down in 1995.[2] In 2003, the Soulangh Cultural Park Preparatory Office was established. The factory was then transformed into Soulangh Cultural Park and was opened in 2005. In 2013, it initiated the Soulangh Artist Village.[3][4]

Architecture

The cultural park also consists of 14 former warehouses of the factory.[3] It also has library, playroom and museum.[2]

Exhibitions

The cultural park displays exhibitions on Tainan folk art and Siraya people.[2]

gollark: > According to gollark, the pathfinding in EWO was really weird because it tried to be turing-complete. This led to the achievement “How the fuck did we get here?”, intended to be almost impossible to obtain, be achievable in less than 6 minutes, by getting all emus to target you and using another bug to provide infinite sticks. This was discovered by runner Andrew_the_Emu.> Due to a bug, it is possible to change certain stats about the character in the menu before entering the game, notably the number of emu kills recorded. This is referred to as “premuing”.These would be hard to implement.
gollark: Also transitive dependencies and silly people.
gollark: Because discord bad.
gollark: I've sent this reply.
gollark: Also, scam emails: surprisingly maybe fun?

See also

References

  1. "Soulangh Cultural Park-Tainan Travel". twtainan.net. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  2. Taiwan News. "Top 10 Alternative Places to visit in Tainan". Taiwan News. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  3. "Soulangh Artist Village|Arts Residency Network--Taiwan". artres.moc.gov.tw. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  4. "Cultural Affairs Bureau,Tainan City Government - Sights and Attractions". culture.tainan.gov.tw. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.