In what is likely to become a precedent-setting struggle, residents of Hsinchu City are locked in a standoff against the city government over a plan to bring down a recently designated cultural heritage site.
The Hsinchu City government recently canceled a plan to dismantle the old dormitory of Hsin Chih-ping (辛志平), a former principal of Hsinchu Boy's High School (新竹中學) and one of Taiwan's most famous educators, after the school's alumni filed charges of official misconduct against the city.
PHOTO: IAN BARTHOLOMEW, TAIPEI TIMES
The alumni accuse mayor Tsai Jen-chien (
"The house has been designated as a city-level heritage site. The city government can't simply refuse to acknowledge it," said Gibran Do (杜文?? ), one of the school's alumni who filed the charges.
But Chui Mei-feng (
Hsin's dormitory, a one-story cypress structure standing on city-owned land, fell into neglect after his death in 1985.
The Hsinchu City government initially planned to demolish the house in August of last year to make way for a parking lot. But the city was forced to postpone the demolition after alumni submitted an application for the dormitory to be designated as a cultural heritage site.
The Cultural Heritage Preservation Law (
City circumvents committee
In November, a committee of six scholars unanimously designated Hsin's residence as a city-level heritage site. Reluctant to give up the car park project, the city government came up with a new proposal, whereby the house would be dismantled piece by piece, to be put back in place after the underground car park has been completed.
The city appears determined to couple the announcement of the house's status with the car park proposal, which it believes is a sufficient compromise.
"The scholars have tentatively agreed to an `adaptive reuse' plan," Chui said.
But Huang Jui-mao (黃瑞茂), an architect from Tamkang University, said the review committee's purpose was to decide on the site's status -- not on a construction project.
"The text of the committee's final conclusion does not endorse the city's proposal, even though some members did raise their personal opinions," Huang said.
The city's plan has also touched off a dispute between scholars over exactly what it means to preserve a heritage site.
Fu Chao-ching (
Meeting standards
But Yeh Nai-chi (
The city will have to build a car park elsewhere if it cannot present a viable design plan, Yeh said.
A survey by Common Wealth magazine in 1998 placed Hsin in the top 30 of the 200 most influential figures in Taiwan's 400-year history.
More than two decades after his retirement in 1975, the school still boasts a long list of prominent alumni -- Academia Sinica president Lee Yuan-tseh (
Last month, Taipei City's Cultural Affairs Bureau designated Four Four South village (四四南村), an early post-war era military compound facing demolition, as "historic architecture" (歷史建物) instead of classifying it as a "historic relic" (古蹟), the standard term for cultural heritage sites.
Conservationists have called the decision a fudge, saying that the kind of legal protection "historic architecture" can enjoy is anything but clear.
In May of last year, the Wuku Temple (
In June, the Control Yuan decided to impeach Miaoli County commissioner Fu Hsueh-peng (傅學鵬) for failing to announce the temple's status under pressure from its owners. The temple had been designated as a heritage site by the Ministry of the Interior in 1997.
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