More than 1,000 works are on display at the Taiwan Design Expo X Taipei Design & City Exhibition, which opened in Taipei on Sunday.
The expo features products, visual communication, multimedia and interior designs from several countries, including Taiwan, according to the Industrial Development Bureau, one of the organizers.
The bureau’s 16 top picks from among the hundreds of Golden Pin Design Award winners are among the items on show, including a minimalist take on an LTE mobile router and a flexible tissue box made from wood.
The expo, which runs through Sept. 29 at the Songshan Cultural and Creative Park, focuses on the concept of an “adaptive city,” which is one that can maintain innovation and vitality while enhancing the well-being of its residents, organizers said.
The “adaptive city” theme is the one Taipei is using in its bid to become the 2016 World Design Capital. Taipei was the only city to submit an application.
Officials from the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design will conduct an on-site evaluation in the middle of this month.
Taiwan’s Liu Ming-i, right, who also goes by the name Ray Liu, poses with a Chinese Taipei flag after winning the gold medal in the men’s physique 170cm competition at the International Fitness and Bodybuilding Federation Asian Championship in Ajman, United Arab Emirates, yesterday.
Costa Rica sent a group of intelligence officials to Taiwan for a short-term training program, the first time the Central American country has done so since the countries ended official diplomatic relations in 2007, a Costa Rican media outlet reported last week. Five officials from the Costa Rican Directorate of Intelligence and Security last month spent 23 days in Taipei undergoing a series of training sessions focused on national security, La Nacion reported on Friday, quoting unnamed sources. The Costa Rican government has not confirmed the report. The Chinese embassy in Costa Rica protested the news, saying in a statement issued the same
A year-long renovation of Taipei’s Bangka Park (艋舺公園) began yesterday, as city workers fenced off the site and cleared out belongings left by homeless residents who had been living there. Despite protests from displaced residents, a city official defended the government’s relocation efforts, saying transitional housing has been offered. The renovation of the park in Taipei’s Wanhua District (萬華), near Longshan Temple (龍山寺), began at 9am yesterday, as about 20 homeless people packed their belongings and left after being asked to move by city personnel. Among them was a 90-year-old woman surnamed Wang (王), who last week said that she had no plans
TO BE APPEALED: The environment ministry said coal reduction goals had to be reached within two months, which was against the principle of legitimate expectation The Taipei High Administrative Court on Thursday ruled in favor of the Taichung Environmental Protection Bureau in its administrative litigation against the Ministry of Environment for the rescission of a NT$18 million fine (US$609,570) imposed by the bureau on the Taichung Power Plant in 2019 for alleged excess coal power generation. The bureau in November 2019 revised what it said was a “slip of the pen” in the text of the operating permit granted to the plant — which is run by Taiwan Power Co (Taipower) — in October 2017. The permit originally read: “reduce coal use by 40 percent from Jan.