Tunnel built for Chiang Kai-shek opens to public - Taipei Times

2022-08-13 03:21:09 By : Dongguan Xin Lida

An underground tunnel in the east wing of the Grand Hotel in Taipei that once served as an emergency exit for former president Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石) was yesterday opened to the public for the first time since it was built 50 years ago.

A passage in the west wing of the hotel has been open since September 2019, drawing more than 50,000 visitors within three months of its opening. Last year, about 170,000 visited the west tunnel, the hotel said.

As tours of the west tunnel were warmly received, the hotel began renovating the east passage more than a year ago to open it to the public, it said.

Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

With the opening of the once-secret passages to guided tours, travelers can better understand the history of the Grand Hotel, it added.

The tunnels, designed to evacuate Chiang and his guests in the event of an emergency, were added to the hotel’s plans in 1970, when construction had begun on the main building, the hotel said, adding that it is the only international hotel with such passages.

In addition to its main architect, Yang Cho-cheng (楊卓成), the hotel invited a German-American engineer with extensive experience in building military bunkers during World War II to design the tunnels, it said.

Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

Visitors to the 67m-long east passage first descend an 84-step staircase before continuing down the tunnel.

The spiral passage helps protect evacuees from attackers and bullets, the hotel said.

Walls inside the tunnel have an uneven surface to absorb sound, it said, adding that 43 explosion-proof lamps were installed to prevent injuries from glass shards during evacuation.

Photo: Chang Chia-ming, Taipei Times

The passage leads to a garden, which was previously the site of a Japanese temple. The former residence of Kung Lin-wei (孔令偉), who was the hotel’s first manager and a niece of Soong Mayling (宋美齡), Chiang’s wife, was at the end of garden, the hotel said.

As people are also curious about Kung’s mysterious lifestyle, the residence would also be opened to visitors for the first time, it added.

The 85m-long west passage has a 20m-long slide next to the staircase, which was used to evacuate anyone unable to use the stairs.

For the east passage’s opening, the hotel created seven state banquet menus from the more than 200 dishes it has prepared for presidents, from Chiang to President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文).

A historic tour package is available, which includes a visit to the east passage, the Chiang Kai-shek Shilin Residence in Taipei’s Shilin District (士林) and National Revolutionary Martyrs’ Shrine, along with a presidential meal set and accommodation at the hotel.

The east passage would initially be limited to customers joining as part of historical tours, corporate customers and state banquet diners, due to the passage’s limited capacity, the hotel said.

UNDER WATCH: Taiwan will have to establish a standardized nucleic acid testing method to identify the virus and monitor its spread, the CDC said The Langya henipavirus, which can be transmitted from animals to humans, has been discovered in China, with 35 human infections reported so far, Taiwan’s Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said, adding that the nation would establish a nucleic acid testing method to identify the virus. A study titled “A Zoonotic Henipavirus in Febrile Patients in China” that was published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Thursday said that a new henipavirus associated with a fever-causing human illness was identified in China. The study said an investigation identified 35 patients with acute infection of the Langya henipavirus in China’s Shandong

If any war were to break out between the US and China, one trigger might be the increasingly frequent fighter jet encounters near Taiwan. Almost every day, Taiwanese fighter pilots hop in their US-made F-16s to intercept Chinese warplanes screaming past their territory. The encounters probe the nation’s defenses and force the pilots on both sides to avoid mistakes that could lead to a crisis that spins out of control. “I didn’t know whether they would fire at me,” said retired colonel Mountain Wang, recounting a tense five-minute confrontation he had with Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) jets more than a decade

INCREASINGLY EMBOLDENED: China can no longer be dismissed as inexperienced, demonstrating an ability to coordinate land and sea missile systems, an expert said Beijing’s largest-ever exercises around Taiwan have offered essential clues into its plans for a grueling blockade in the event of an attack on Taiwan, and revealed an increasingly emboldened Chinese military, experts said. The visit to Taiwan by US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi — second in line to the presidency — sparked outrage from Beijing, which launched vast military maneuvers around the nation, even at the risk of partially exposing its plans to the US and its Asian allies. Mobilizing fighter planes, helicopters and warships, the drills aim to simulate a blockade of Taiwan and include practicing an “attack on

RESTRICTION EASED: Passengers would no longer be directed to designated waiting areas, and be allowed to shop and dine, the operator of the airport said International travelers transiting at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport would from today be allowed to go shopping and dine in the airport’s departure areas, the airport operator said, as the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) eased some border restrictions imposed to contain the spread of COVID-19. Taoyuan International Airport Corp said reopening borders is a global trend, and since reallowing transit passengers from June 15, the airport has continued to review its procedures to improve services and efficiency. Deputy Minister of Health and Welfare Victor Wang (王必勝), who heads the CECC, inspected the airport on July 22, while Deputy Minister of Transportation and