During the Japanese Occupation from 1920 to 1930, with the establishment of the Keelung Fortress headquarters, the colonial government built the "Dashawan" area (formerly the Jinsha Town Administrative District); today’s Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District Office Site and the area opposite to it. The "Headquarters Official House" group is used as a dormitory for Japanese scholars and officials.
After the restructuring of the city in 1931, this group of official residences was designated as Masada Town No. 5 and No. 6, and the post-war house numbers were between No. 107 and No. 250 on Zhongzheng Road. For decades, after the use, demolition and reconstruction of the family homes of the National Army in Jianshi New Village, the only remaining case of the guards’ family homes of the Keelung Fortress Headquarters is located at No. 111 and 113, Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District, Keelung City; in 2006 It was announced as a historic site in Keelung City on December 07. It is one of the military fortresses in Keelung in the 1930s, and it is currently the few remaining Japanese-style dormitories.
Representatives of the Guanshe Group of the Fortress Command
The Keelung Fortress Headquarters Faculty House, which is close to the Keelung Veterans Service Office, is a 90-year-old Japanese-style dormitory building. After Taiwan's recovery, a "Jianshi New Village" was built around it, which was the military dormitory area for the colonel under the fortress headquarters. Originally, the Ministry of National Defense planned to demolish the dependent villages. In 2006, the Keelung City Government passed the review of the Historical Sites, Historic Architecture Settlement and Cultural Landscape Review Committee, and officially announced that the fortress headquarters will be designated as a municipal historic site, avoiding the fate of being punished. . Although the rear facade of the building has been changed due to the addition of the building, it still has the historical value of Keelung’s local architectural features and military dormitory pattern.
The historic site building and land were allocated in July 2016 and taken over by the Keelung City Cultural Bureau. (The original management agency was the Army Command of the Ministry of National Defense and the State-owned Property Administration of the Ministry of Finance)
The layout of the official residence is a single-family Japanese dormitory building. In response to the rainy geographical environment in Keelung, the exterior has been greatly increased with special designs, such as rain shelters over two feet, thresholds up to 15cm, and drains with large openings, which are quite local style and characteristics. It has the unique space layout of Japanese-style dormitories, such as between the beds, connecting rooms, and seating.
During the Japanese Occupation from 1920 to 1930, with the establishment of the Keelung Fortress headquarters, the colonial government built the "Dashawan" area (formerly the Jinsha Town Administrative District); today’s Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District Office Site and the area opposite to it. The "Headquarters Official House" group is used as a dormitory for Japanese scholars and officials.
After the restructuring of the city in 1931, this group of official residences was designated as Masada Town No. 5 and No. 6, and the post-war house numbers were between No. 107 and No. 250 on Zhongzheng Road. For decades, after the use, demolition and reconstruction of the family homes of the National Army in Jianshi New Village, the only remaining case of the guards’ family homes of the Keelung Fortress Headquarters is located at No. 111 and 113, Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District, Keelung City; in 2006 It was announced as a historic site in Keelung City on December 07. It is one of the military fortresses in Keelung in the 1930s, and it is currently the few remaining Japanese-style dormitories.
Representatives of the Guanshe Group of the Fortress Command
The Keelung Fortress Headquarters Faculty House, which is close to the Keelung Veterans Service Office, is a 90-year-old Japanese-style dormitory building. After Taiwan's recovery, a "Jianshi New Village" was built around it, which was the military dormitory area for the colonel under the fortress headquarters. Originally, the Ministry of National Defense planned to demolish the dependent villages. In 2006, the Keelung City Government passed the review of the Historical Sites, Historic Architecture Settlement and Cultural Landscape Review Committee, and officially announced that the fortress headquarters will be designated as a municipal historic site, avoiding the fate of being punished. . Although the rear facade of the building has been changed due to the addition of the building, it still has the historical value of Keelung’s local architectural features and military dormitory pattern.
The historic site building and land were allocated in July 2016 and taken over by the Keelung City Cultural Bureau. (The original management agency was the Army Command of the Ministry of National Defense and the State-owned Property Administration of the Ministry of Finance)
Traces of use and reconstruction in the past 100 years
The layout of the official residence is a single-family Japanese dormitory building. In response to the rainy geographical environment in Keelung, the exterior has been greatly increased with special designs, such as rain shelters over two feet, thresholds up to 15cm, and drains with large openings, which are quite local style and characteristics. It has the unique space layout of Japanese-style dormitories, such as between the beds, connecting rooms, and seating.
Starting from November 2018, the Keelung City Bureau of Culture, with the support of the project funding support of the "Great Keelung Historical Scene Reproduction Integration Project", has initiated the restoration project for the official residences of the Keelung Fortress Headquarters, a municipal historical site, and it will be completed in 2020. . The restored site will become a new cultural, leisure and creative base of Keelung City where art groups can enter and curate in the future.
During the Japanese Occupation from 1920 to 1930, with the establishment of the Keelung Fortress headquarters, the colonial government built the "Dashawan" area (formerly the Jinsha Town Administrative District); today’s Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District Office Site and the area opposite to it. The "Headquarters Official House" group is used as a dormitory for Japanese scholars and officials.
After the restructuring of the city in 1931, this group of official residences was designated as Masada Town No. 5 and No. 6, and the post-war house numbers were between No. 107 and No. 250 on Zhongzheng Road. For decades, after the use, demolition and reconstruction of the family homes of the National Army in Jianshi New Village, the only remaining case of the guards’ family homes of the Keelung Fortress Headquarters is located at No. 111 and 113, Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District, Keelung City; in 2006 It was announced as a historic site in Keelung City on December 07. It is one of the military fortresses in Keelung in the 1930s, and it is currently the few remaining Japanese-style dormitories.
Representatives of the Guanshe Group of the Fortress Command
The Keelung Fortress Headquarters Faculty House, which is close to the Keelung Veterans Service Office, is a 90-year-old Japanese-style dormitory building. After Taiwan's recovery, a "Jianshi New Village" was built around it, which was the military dormitory area for the colonel under the fortress headquarters. Originally, the Ministry of National Defense planned to demolish the dependent villages. In 2006, the Keelung City Government passed the review of the Historical Sites, Historic Architecture Settlement and Cultural Landscape Review Committee, and officially announced that the fortress headquarters will be designated as a municipal historic site, avoiding the fate of being punished. . Although the rear facade of the building has been changed due to the addition of the building, it still has the historical value of Keelung’s local architectural features and military dormitory pattern.
The historic site building and land were allocated in July 2016 and taken over by the Keelung City Cultural Bureau. (The original management agency was the Army Command of the Ministry of National Defense and the State-owned Property Administration of the Ministry of Finance)
The layout of the official residence is a single-family Japanese dormitory building. In response to the rainy geographical environment in Keelung, the exterior has been greatly increased with special designs, such as rain shelters over two feet, thresholds up to 15cm, and drains with large openings, which are quite local style and characteristics. It has the unique space layout of Japanese-style dormitories, such as between the beds, connecting rooms, and seating.
During the Japanese Occupation from 1920 to 1930, with the establishment of the Keelung Fortress headquarters, the colonial government built the "Dashawan" area (formerly the Jinsha Town Administrative District); today’s Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District Office Site and the area opposite to it. The "Headquarters Official House" group is used as a dormitory for Japanese scholars and officials.
After the restructuring of the city in 1931, this group of official residences was designated as Masada Town No. 5 and No. 6, and the post-war house numbers were between No. 107 and No. 250 on Zhongzheng Road. For decades, after the use, demolition and reconstruction of the family homes of the National Army in Jianshi New Village, the only remaining case of the guards’ family homes of the Keelung Fortress Headquarters is located at No. 111 and 113, Zhongzheng Road, Zhongzheng District, Keelung City; in 2006 It was announced as a historic site in Keelung City on December 07. It is one of the military fortresses in Keelung in the 1930s, and it is currently the few remaining Japanese-style dormitories.
Representatives of the Guanshe Group of the Fortress Command
The Keelung Fortress Headquarters Faculty House, which is close to the Keelung Veterans Service Office, is a 90-year-old Japanese-style dormitory building. After Taiwan's recovery, a "Jianshi New Village" was built around it, which was the military dormitory area for the colonel under the fortress headquarters. Originally, the Ministry of National Defense planned to demolish the dependent villages. In 2006, the Keelung City Government passed the review of the Historical Sites, Historic Architecture Settlement and Cultural Landscape Review Committee, and officially announced that the fortress headquarters will be designated as a municipal historic site, avoiding the fate of being punished. . Although the rear facade of the building has been changed due to the addition of the building, it still has the historical value of Keelung’s local architectural features and military dormitory pattern.
The historic site building and land were allocated in July 2016 and taken over by the Keelung City Cultural Bureau. (The original management agency was the Army Command of the Ministry of National Defense and the State-owned Property Administration of the Ministry of Finance)
Traces of use and reconstruction in the past 100 years
The layout of the official residence is a single-family Japanese dormitory building. In response to the rainy geographical environment in Keelung, the exterior has been greatly increased with special designs, such as rain shelters over two feet, thresholds up to 15cm, and drains with large openings, which are quite local style and characteristics. It has the unique space layout of Japanese-style dormitories, such as between the beds, connecting rooms, and seating.
Starting from November 2018, the Keelung City Bureau of Culture, with the support of the project funding support of the "Great Keelung Historical Scene Reproduction Integration Project", has initiated the restoration project for the official residences of the Keelung Fortress Headquarters, a municipal historical site, and it will be completed in 2020. . The restored site will become a new cultural, leisure and creative base of Keelung City where art groups can enter and curate in the future.