Kaohsiung City Tour
It’s located on the section between Bo-ai 2nd Rd. and Sinjhuang 1st Road. It combines delicate shopping mall, fine restaurants, and an international banquet room of Grand Hi-Lai Hotel. The plaza includes 8 ground floors and 1 underground floor. It had been built from August 2004 until July 2008. The idea of operation is “lead a splendid life & let a dream take off.” This shopping plaza is the new generation shopping center that accesses to fashions and times. In addition, it is guided by the professional management team from Hanshin Department Store. The shopping place, 21,000 Pings (about 70,000M2), collects all commodity levels that satisfy family having fun and purchasing. With carrying
22 popular theme restaurants, the famous exotic food, and extremely delicious multi-national cuisine here can satisfy the customers’ hunger of new tastes. A new generation top supermarket enriches daily life and contents the needs of different customers.
R14 Kaohsiung Arena
O5/R10 Formosa Boulevard
Formosa Boulevard Station is named after the Formosa Boulevard project, a remodelling of Kaohsiung's Jhongshan Road in preparation for the 2009 World Games. The "Formosa" in Formosa Boulevard is in turn named after the Kaohsiung Incident. When a group of Nationalists tried to ban copies of a magazine run by people linked with the Tangwai movement (now the Democratic Progressive Party). Transferring from the Red line to the Orange line (or vice versa) takes roughly 4 minutes.
O1 Sizihwan(Hamasing)
Located on the Taiwan Strait at the north of the entrance to Kaohsiung Harbor, Sizihwan is surrounded by mountains with Shoushan to the northeast and Shaochuantou Mountain, a spur of Shoushan to the east. The area is dominated by the campus of National Sun Yat-sen University which faces the open waters of the Taiwan Strait. Xiziwan Beach (known as Takao Beach during Japanese rule) is a black sand beach that sits right at the edge of the campus and is a popular recreation area. The Former British Consulate at Takaoand the historic Lingxing Temple at the peak of Shaochuantou overlook Xiziwan Bay.