One of Taiwan's oldest cities and the former capital, Tainan is a modern city of commerce and trade, history and culture. It is also a religious center, with more than a thousand temples (including Taiwan’s first Confucian temple) plus frequent festivals and parades. Visit Guohua Street to sample Taiwanese specialties and local markets. Discover Taiwan’s people and past at The National Museum of History. Chimei Museum includes beautiful gardens and a private collection of art and musical instruments.
Restaurants in Tainan
4.5 based on 184 reviews
Stayed at Mutsun Springs Resort - fabulous place - they took us here to see the fire/water spring. Amazing natural spot and stay to watch the sunset. It is amazing!
4.5 based on 19 reviews
Stayed for a night. Room are comfortable, well maintained and clean. Huge and bright room. Bed is comfortable. Lots of activity within the farm. There is a mini river that can row bamboo boats, a mini golf putting range, a mini zoo, a cute petting zoo and a mini bird park. The Farm itself is not huge but needs at least one full day to trully enjoy every part of it. lots of photo opportunities. The surroundings is well maintained and there is insect repellent provided in a small wooden hut around the farm. Staff around the farm are friendly, professional and helpful. There is a restaurant within the farm that serves lunch and dinner. Its better to book the room together with the meals as it will be cheaper. There is also a few cafe around the farm to have a coffee break if needed. Breakfast served is delicious and fresh.
4.0 based on 283 reviews
The exhibits inside this former Japanese prefecture building were well laid out and provided an closer look into Taiwan's literary history. We had the benefit of a local providing additional perspective and translating. Worth visiting, but have a someone with language skills accompany you for an optimal experience.
4.0 based on 1,007 reviews
In January 2020 my wife and I included a 6 night Wendy Wu private tour of Taiwan as part of our 18 day Asian trip we arranged to celebrate our 40th wedding anniversary. Our tour took in Taipei, Taroko Gorge, Sun Moon Lake, Tainan and Kaohsiung. While in Tainan we visited notable attractions and none better than the former Tait and Co Merchant House incorporating the Anping Tree House, located in the historic Anping precinct. Before offering a review on the Anping Tree House let me start by reviewing the former Tait and Co Merchant House which is next door to the Tree House and all part of the overall attraction package. This grand building was built in 1867 by British merchant James Tait who was engaged in the tea export business, insurance and banking. The building, a south-facing two storey structure with a central main staircase, demonstrates a fusion of both Eastern and Western architectural styles. Both storeys have a succession of arches circulating east, west and south and the top storey white-walled verandah has a green-glazed vase-shaped rail. Inside on the ground floor is an excellent museum, comprising several display rooms providing an impressive exhibition explaining the origin of merchant houses, trade shipping routes and trading models with a different theme room by room. One of the best rooms visited was the one with the excellent display of the early tea merchants and how they manufactured and graded and traded Formosa Oolong Tea. As an avid lover of all things tea I found this particularly impressive. Another room was set up as a period dining room setting. Then there were many interesting items of yesteryear on display. For example, it was great to marvel at an old Corona typewriter, a novel 19th century mechanical calculator and classic weighing scales, allowing us to appreciate the huge technological advances the world has made in making these commodities simpler and easier to use today. There was even an exhibit of a nice set of Japanese gold coins from the period of 1603 to 1867. Our tour itinerary unfortunately did not include a visit to the upper storey wax museum using wax figures to display scenes of early life in Taiwan, which was a pity. From the Merchant House we headed next door to the truly amazing Anping Tree House. What can I say – absolutely awesome to see before our very eyes the invasive power of the banyan tree when a building is left abandoned. The trees and their roots have over many years successfully strangled and just about suffocated the old house. This was an amazing sight and a demonstration of the wonders of Mother Nature. The derelict building was the former warehouse for Tait and Co. During the Japanese period of occupation of Taiwan (between 1895 and 1945), it was used to store salt for the Anping Branch of the Japanese Salt Corporation. After the War it became the warehouse for the Taiwan Salt Corporation for a time, but then lay empty for many years when the banyan trees became the buildings new tenants forming a living banyan roof and walls of banyan roots. The complex was renovated to include raised wooden paths and an overhead steel walkway to enable tourists to enjoy this rather unique attraction today. A brochure available at the Tree House aptly describes the banyan trees of the Anping Tree House. They belong to an invasive species that aggressively expands its territory and that the high exclusivity of the banyan ensures other epiphytic plants (any plant that grows upon another plant or object merely for physical support) will not encroach on their territory. It goes on to say that banyan trees thrive in humid places because their aerial roots are capable of absorbing moisture directly from the air. Roots of these trees secrete an acid that dissolves limestone, making them ideally suited to rocky environments. Thus the banyan trees found it very easy to cling to the brick walls of the building which were laid with a special mortar made of ground oyster shell, syrup and glutinous rice. We enjoyed our thirty minute walk around the building seeing how the banyan tree roots have successfully blended into the building walls and the immense level of tree strangulation of the building that had taken place over time. It was well worth taking the stairs to the overhead steel walkway to get even better views of this amazing phenomenon. This was a terrific place to visit, if nothing else because it represented something different from the usual temples and historic monuments or physical landforms such as rivers, lakes and mountains that we routinely visit in the course of our travels. As such, it is a highly recommended attraction to be included on any Taiwan touring itinerary.
4.0 based on 946 reviews
The Department Store That Inaugurated An Age of Fashion in the 1930s--Hayashi Department Store On December 5th, 1932, Hayashi Department Store opened and thus a modern age of Taiwanese culture began. The decade of 1930s was the start point of modern civilization in Taiwan. As the electric lamps, telephone, and water supply lines popularized, symbols of civilization such like the airplane and motor vehicles flooded into Taiwan. The cafés were becoming the fad of the day, as well as pop culture, movies, phonographs and jazz music. People´s mentality was opening up, and freewill dating was taking over arranged marriages, while dresses was replacing kimonos and Westernized education was popularizing. This was Taiwan in the 1930s. In 1932, Columbia Records Company released the eponymous theme song for a movie in Taiwanese "Peach Blossom Weeps Tears of Blood". In 1933, Teng Yu-hsien's popular song "Viva Tonal: The Dancing Age" helped to launch the first pop music singer Sun-sun (born Lau Tsing-hiong or Lau Chheng-hoing,1914-43) in Taiwan. In the same year Teng wrote and published three classic Taiwanese songs "Bang Chhun-Hong(Looking for the Spring Breeze)", "U ia hue(Flower in the Rainy Night)"and "Guat-ia Tshiu(Sadness in a Moony Night)". As the Pacific War broke out, the final waltz in the Dancing Age of Taiwanwas played. And so the Hayashi Department Store ended its brief yet splendid rendezvous with Tainan. 【The Founder of Hayashi Department Store: Hayashi Houichi】 Hayashi Department Store (ハヤシ百貨) was known to the Tainan people as "The Five-Stories-House"(Gō͘-chàn-lâu-á). It was founded by Japanese businessman Hayashi Houichi. Born in a village in the mountains of Yamaguchi Prefecture in Japan on February 6th, 1883, Hayashi lost his parent in his childhood, and was raised by his uncle and aunt. After their death, he grew up on his own means with his brothers and sisters. In 1902, at the tender age of 19, he left the village and entered the Sanyou Railway Company, and left the company 6 years later to start his own delivery company. Still at a tender age, Hayashi wrapped up his company in April, 1912 and came to Tainan the same year to try his luck. Fortunately, he found a mentor in Baba Tokujirou, the owner of Nichikichi Gofukuya, a traditional attire shop, who gave Hayashi a job as bookkeeper in the shop. Hayashi learned about the market, and with his vision and ability, he opened a little shop in Baba's residence, located at Oomiyachou Icchoume Nibannchi (Now the street corner across Quanmei Cinema). Two other shops followed and Hayashi made his first fortune. Investing in four other companies, Hayashi eventually accumulated enough capital to found Hayashi Department Store. The Department Store formally opened on December 5th., 1932, just days after the first department store in Taiwan, Kikumoto Department Store, also known as The Seventh Heaven, opened in Taipei City. Thus Hayashi Department Store became the second large department store in Taiwan, as well as the largest department store in southern Taiwan. Unfortunately, Hayashi himself fell ill days before, and passed away in Taipei on December 10th, 1932. Early January in 2013, Hayashi's second daughter-in-law, Hayashi Chieko and her family came from Japan to visit the Hayashi Department Store. This was the first time a Hayashi family's member entered the building after 80 years. Pale and Lackluster Years After WWII (1945~2013) After the WWII ended in the Pacific in 1945, Hayashi Department Store, damaged by air raids during the war, was transformed into offices by Taiwan Salt Factory and the "Salt Police". The top floor was used for anti-aircraft warfare. In 1977, the Salt Police was transformed into the Third Special Police Corps, and the building was mostly occupied by Taiwan Salt Company, which eventually moved its office to the current Jiankang Road site. Only until 1998 Hayashi Department Store was classified as a Municipal Heritage Site, and the ownership was transferred to the Tainan City Government. Restoration was completed in 2013. A Newborn Sprout in the Spring (2013) After the restoration was completed in 2013, the Cultural Affairs Bureau of Tainan City Government launched a bid for outsourcing of the management right and after an open bidding selection, Focus (Koche Development Company) won the bid. After 81 years, Hayashi Department Store will welcome a renaissance as Tainan Cultural Creative Department Store, becoming a window towards a New Modern Age in Tainan, and telling new stories of a newborn sprout of spring. So the New Life Movement has begun in Tainan.
Loved this multi-level department store that is also a historical building. We shopped each floor. Top of the building outdoors has a nice view, chairs and coffee spot as well as gift shop.
4.0 based on 8 reviews
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