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Taipei Film House; Taipei Futai Street Mansion; Taipei Guest House; Taipei Main Public Library; Taipei Music Center; Taipei Muslim Cemetery; Taipei Post Office; Taipei Qin Hall; Taipei Water Park; Taiwan Education Association Building; Taiwan New Cultural Movement Memorial Hall; Taiwan Traditional Theatre Center; Tianma Tea House; Tianmu White ...
The two-part main building, six stories high, mainly houses government offices and maintenance services. The office wings feature balconies and long corridor that allow view of the sunlit North and South Gardens. The 60-meter tower at the center of the building was the tallest structure in the Taipei Basin during Japanese rule. When the ...
Parliament Building [2] 1923 Ethiopia: Ethiopian Parliament Building: 1930s A new Parliament Building is planned. Ghana: Parliament House of Ghana: 1965 Guinea: Palais du Peuple: 1970 Guinea-Bissau: Palácio Colinas de Boé: Ivory Coast: Parliament Building: Kenya: Parliament Buildings: 1950s Lesotho: Parliament Building: Liberia: Liberian ...
Old Parliament House or Old Parliament Building may refer to: Old Parliament Building, Colombo, Sri Lanka; Old Parliament Building (Quebec), Canada;
Palais Garnier (also known as the Paris Opera) (1861–1875), Paris, France; Port of Liverpool Building (1903–1907), Liverpool, England; Rosecliff Mansion (1898–1902), Newport, Rhode Island, United States; Royal Museum for Central Africa (1905–1909), Tervuren, Belgium; Semperoper (1878), Dresden, Germany
A park surrounds the plaza and a wall surrounds the site. The square sits within sight of the Presidential Office Building. Liberty Square regularly serves as the site of mass gatherings in Taiwan. It is the scene for red-carpet ceremonies when Taiwan's president greets foreign dignitaries. Crowds gather at the square throughout the year for ...
Former Legislative Yuan building in Nanjing, 1928 (seen in 2017). Former Legislative Yuan and Control Yuan building in Nanjing, 1946–1949 (seen in 2011). The original Legislative Yuan was formed in the original capital of Nanjing after the completion of the Northern Expedition. Its 51 members were appointed to a term of two years.
The old city hall building eventually became the Executive Yuan building.) As Taipei grew, its city hall could only accommodate around 1,000 employees, and many other units were scattered in various rented offices. [2] To address this problem, a new city hall was opened in 1994 in the Xinyi District. [2]