New Taipei City Gold Museum
新北市立黃金博物館
The Gold Building
Established4 November 2004[1]
LocationRuifang, New Taipei, Taiwan
Coordinates25°06′35″N 121°51′26″E / 25.10972°N 121.85722°E / 25.10972; 121.85722
Typemuseum
Visitors2,184,043 (2016)[2]
OwnerNew Taipei City Government
WebsiteOfficial website

The New Taipei City Gold Museum (traditional Chinese: 新北市立黃金博物館; simplified Chinese: 新北市立黄金博物馆; pinyin: Xīnběishìlì Huángjīn Bówùguǎn), formerly known as the Gold Ecological Park, is a museum of the gold mining industry in Ruifang District, New Taipei, Taiwan.

History

The museum was opened on 4 November 2004 by the Taipei County Government as Gold Ecological Park (Chinese: 黃金博物園區). After the formation of New Taipei City, the park was renamed Gold Museum, though as of December 2015, some signage still shows the old name, including the front entrance gate.[3][4][1]

Architecture

The Gold Museum is an open-air museum consisting of several buildings and sites. The museum buildings used to be offices, dormitories, processing plants and other facilities of the Taiwan Metal Mining Corp. The Gold Museum includes the following: Gold Building, Experience the Benshan Fifth Tunnel, Crown Prince Chalet, Jin Shui Special Exhibition Hall, Gold Refining Building, and Four Joined Japanese-Style Residences.

Exhibitions

The Gold Building provides information about the discovery of gold in the area, with displays on the Benshan Tunnels, old mining equipment, mining transport systems and a brief introduction to the World War II Japanese Kinkaseki POW Camp on its first floor. The second floor introduces the properties of gold, with works of art made of gold and a world-record 220.30 kg 999.9 pure gold brick for visitors to see and touch.[1]

The Crown Prince Chalet is a residence built in 1922 for the proposed visit of Crown Prince Hirohito to the area (a visit that never materialized). Decades later it was used by Chiang Kai-shek as lodging in the area.

Transportation

The museum is accessible by bus from Ruifang Station of the Taiwan Railways.[5]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Museum of Gold Jiufen". TravelKing. TravelKing. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  2. "Annual statistics breakdown by scenic areas (2016)". Tourism Bureau, Ministry of Transportation and Communications (Taiwan). Archived from the original on 12 October 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  3. "History". New Taipei City Government Gold Museum. 20 April 2018. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
  4. "Gold Museum". eng.taiwan.net.tw. Taipei: Tourism Bureau, Republic of China (Taiwan). 2014. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  5. "Gold Museum". Local Cultural Museums. Taipei: Ministry of Culture. 2012. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2014.
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