Plans are afoot to convert the historically recognized site of the Japanese-colonial-era Taiwan Railway Ministry into a museum park, the Taiwan Railway Administration (TRA) said.
The TRA said the site that housed the main building of the Railway Department was completed in 1919.
Also accommodated on the site are the Octagon Building, Wartime Commander Office, Engineering Office, Electricity Office, Cafeteria and the Taipei Railway Workshop.
Between the ending of World War II and 1989 — when the TRA moved to the current building — the ministry building was used as the railway TRA head office.
Except for the Taipei Railway Workshop, which was designated as a historical site by the city, the other buildings on the site were recognized as national historical sites in May 2007, the TRA said.
The Taipei Railway Workshop, which is to the west of the ministry building, was constructed in the Qing Dynasty to house the Machinery Office.
The workshop was expanded in the Japanese colonial era to manufacture machinery and repair trains, becoming an important site for industrialization and modernization in Taiwan, the TRA said.
The restoration project, a joint collaboration between the TRA and the National Taiwan Museum, was launched earlier this month.
While the TRA is providing the land and the property, the museum would be in charge of restoring, maintaining and operating the building.
The first stage of construction is scheduled to be completed within 600 days.
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