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Thursday, 6 August 2015

Taiwan Travel Adventures 2011 - Day 3: NTU Education Tour, Part 1

   


     After our Danshui Joyful Life Tour, my tour guides and I rushed to the Beitou MRT station to meet a French male tourist.  But alas!  We ran in late and when we arrived, the French guy apparently joined another tour.  We were just ten minutes late and the French guy thought that the guides bailed out on him.   So, I was the only tourist, too, for the afternoon tour.

     The guides were supposed to bring me to Yangmingshan and to the Calla Lily Festival.  However, another guide told us that she just got out from the mountain and it was really, really traffic.  After all, it was a Sunday, the last weekend before the Flora Festival ends and the last day for the Calla Lily Festival.  So, after much pondering, and not wanting to be stuck in traffic without actually seeing anything, I decided to pick an alternative tour, and I chose the NTU Education tour.  My guides were not really knowledgeable about the tour since their specialty lies with the National Museum and Yangmingshan tours, but what the heck.  I've been to most of the places on the free tours program and really, I have not been to anywhere along the MRT green line where the NTU is located.  So, to NTU we go!

     For most people, National Taiwan University is known as one of Taiwan's best universities.  But for fans of Meteor Garden, NTU provides one of the most recognizable places of the series, the palm-tree lined path leading to the fictional Yingde University, aptly known as the Royal Palm Boulevard.   So, I was more than happy to see the campus.  Teehee.




     The National Taiwan University has sprawling grounds.  You really need to use a bicycle, or a car, to go around the campus.  You can, of course, just walk from the gate to that huge building in the horizon and beyond.  But if you're a student, you might run late getting to your classes.


Multi-level bicycle parkingoutside NTU's gates.


     As to places of interest, the NTU has a lot to offer.  Just to the right from the gates near the MRT exit, you could see a Parthenon-like architecture, or something, which seems unusual, amidst a classical garden. It's really pretty in it's white, marbled glory, at least I think it's made of marble.  But, it's also creepy, too, considering that the structure houses the grave of NTU's First President, Mr. Fu Si-Nian. In short, it's a mausoleum. Anyway, the garden itself is named after Fu Si Nian.


Entrance to the Fu Si-Nian Memorial Garden





     We saw a group of cosplayers having a photoshoot at the grave.  Hehe.  Who can blame them?  The structure provides a perfect backdrop to their costumes.



     When we exited the garden, we saw a new bunch of cosplayers headed down the garden.



     We rounded up a part of the campus grounds from the gates near the MRT exit and I've found out that NTU is a favorite  location for photo shoots.  We've seen a couple having their prenup pictorial, which is hugely popular in Taiwan, there.



     Other places of interest includes the Fu Bell and the Main Library, among others.  Definitely, architecture buffs will be delighted to tour the campus.  And what do you know?  There's a farm on campus and an ecological pond (Liugongjun Pool)!  Although I wasn't able too see it, there's another pond called the Drunken Moon Lake, which despite its crazy name, is reputedly a very lovely and romantic lake, especially at night.



Fu Bell


 Main Library


 Inside the library.  Reminds me of UST Main Library.
I love libraries.  I can live inside one.


 Red bricks and archways of the Main Library.


View of the Royal Palm Blvd. from the Main Library.


The NTU has some sort of a farm, I think, in the campus.  
And this is a fountain a la water system.




Ecological pond.


     Here's a map of NTU for your reference (click on the photo for full resolution):


   
     In part 2 of my NTU tour, I'd show you where to buy two of the most famous treats on campus as well as how to spend a weekend afternoon like a local.