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The Birth of Park         1









                       The Birth of  Taipei’s Parks





                     The term “park” was first seen during Japanese occupation period when the Japanese
                     government introduced the concept of urban planning. However, places like park and green
                     space that provide recreation, gatherings and activities for people have long existed. The
                     concept of the “park” is simply transforming the private-owned space into the public-shared
                     space. (Description like “public playground” is seen on the treaty book back then in the old
                     Shogunate era).

                     From a Temple’s Front Yard to a Park


                     There was not a public garden at all in Taiwan a century ago. Before Qing dynasty, it was
                     mostly in the front yard of a temple where people usually got together in their everyday
                     activities because the temples were the center of the villagers’ faith. Gradually, private gardens
                     were developed from family’s mansion. Mainly the design of the gardens inherited the
                     traditional man-made hills, streams and pavilions of Qing dynasty’s style. It was not only
                     a symbol of wealth and taste but also an apparent phenomenon of few people with power
                     grabbing public lands for private gardens. (For example, Taipei’s Frank Mountain area was the
                     Tai-koo nest, the personal library and scenery garden with hills and water, of Weiying Chen
                     in the early days.) It was not until the introduction of urban planning during the Japanese
                     occupation period that the traditional private gardens were transformed into parks opened to
                     public.


                     The Development of  Taipei’s Parks in the Last Hundred Years


                     The constructing of parks is for the purpose of soothing people’s tension from the urban life
                     style and providing public entertaining spaces for civilians. Over the last hundred years, parks
                     changed a lot. In the early time parks were just combination of traditional private gardens
                     with flowers and trees and man-made ponds, pavilions and hills and public spaces in front of
                     temples. Later on, museum, statues and historical relics sites were added into part of a park.
                     Hence, the park is not only a place providing security, public hygiene, recreations, gatherings,
                     disaster prevention, and shelters but also a spiritual support for the civilians, an important
                     public space and an important contributor that witness Taipei’s development of civilization.






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