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Touqian Destination Guide

Explore Touqian in Taiwan

Touqian in the region of Taipei is a place in Taiwan - some 4 mi or ( 6 km ) West of Taipei , the country's capital city .

Interactive map of Touqian

Time in Touqian is now 07:46 PM (Sunday) . The local timezone is named " Asia/Taipei " with a UTC offset of 8 hours. Depending on your budget, these more prominent locations might be interesting for you: Douliu, Yuhengzi, Yangmingshan, Wuguwang, and Taoyuan. Since you are here already, consider visiting Douliu . We saw some hobby film on the internet . Scroll down to see the most favourite one or select the video collection in the navigation. Where to go and what to see in Touqian ? We have collected some references on our attractions page.


Videos

Wu Chia-Ching (Part 1 of 6)

6:53 min by Yokita72
Views: 137025 Rating: 4.67

(Part 1 of 6: Rack 1-3) Wu Chia-Ching (吳珈慶) breaks and runs out 8 consecutive racks after winning the lagging. Event: 2006 Taiwan Men's Pro-Billiard Competition (Leg 2: Group B) Match: Wu Chia-Ching v ..

Wu Chia-Ching (Part 2 of 6)

9:26 min by Yokita72
Views: 51966 Rating: 4.91

(Part 2 of 6: Rack 4-5) Wu Chia-Ching (吳珈慶) breaks and runs out 8 consecutive racks after winning the lagging. Event: 2006 Taiwan Men's Pro-Billiard Competition (Leg 2: Group B) Match: Wu Chia-Ching v ..


Wu Chia-Ching (Part 3 of 6)

8:55 min by Yokita72
Views: 46815 Rating: 4.85

(Part 3 of 6: Rack 6-8) Wu Chia-Ching (吳珈慶) breaks and runs out 8 consecutive racks after winning the lagging. Event: 2006 Taiwan Men's Pro-Billiard Competition (Leg 2: Group B) Match: Wu Chia-Ching v ..

Wu Chia-Ching (Part 4 of 6)

5:57 min by Yokita72
Views: 28316 Rating: 5.00

(Part 4 of 6: Rack 9) Wu Chia-Ching (吳珈慶) breaks and runs out 8 consecutive racks after winning the lagging. Event: 2006 Taiwan Men's Pro-Billiard Competition (Leg 2: Group B) Match: Wu Chia-Ching vs. ..


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Interesting facts about this location

Xinzhuang Baseball Stadium

Xinzhuang Baseball Stadium is a baseball stadium in Xinzhuang District, New Taipei City, Taiwan. It is currently mostly used for CPBL baseball games. The stadium can hold 12,500 people and was opened in 1997.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 25.04 121.45 (Lat./Long.); Less than 3 km away
Tags: Baseball venues in Taiwan, Buildings and structures in New Taipei, Event venues established in 1997, Multi-purpose stadiums in Taiwan, Sport in New Taipei, Sports venues completed in 1997, Visitor attractions in New Taipei

Luzhou District

Luzhou District is an inner city district in northwestern New Taipei City, Taiwan. It has an area of 8.2 km² (2003) and a population of 198,373 people in 66,457 households (December 2011). Luzhou has the second highest population density in Taiwan and 13th in the world, with over 26,600 people per km². Historically the area was called Lō·-chiu (鷺州) and Hê-siūⁿ-chiu (和尚州). Until the 25 December 2010 creation of New Taipei, Luzhou was itself a city in the former Taipei County.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 25.08 121.47 (Lat./Long.); Less than 3 km away
Tags: Districts of New Taipei

Wanhua District

Wanhua District, known in Taiwanese as Bangka a.k.a. Monga, is Taipei City's oldest district. The district is home to historic buildings such as Longshan Temple, an historic temple, and the Red House Theater, the first and largest teahouse and playhouse in Taiwan. Taipei's oldest, but decaying, garment district is also here.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 25.03 121.48 (Lat./Long.); Less than 3 km away
Tags: Districts of Taipei

Sanchong District

Sanchong District is an inner city district in the western part of New Taipei City, Taiwan. With an area of 16.32 km² and a population of 384,618 people (2003), it has the fourth highest population density in Taiwan and 23rd in the world, with over 23,900 people per km². Until the December 25, 2010 creation of New Taipei, Sanchong was itself a city in the former Taipei County.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 25.07 121.50 (Lat./Long.); Less than 3 km away
Tags: Districts of New Taipei

Mengjia Longshan Temple

Mengjia Longshan Temple was built in Taipei in 1738 by settlers from Fujian, China. It served as a place of worship and a gathering place for the Chinese settlers. The temple has been destroyed either in full or in part on numerous earthquakes and fires. During World War II, on 31 May 1945 it was hit by American bombers during the Raid on Taipei, who claimed the Japanese were hiding armaments inside.

More reading: Wikipedia Article
Located at 25.04 121.50 (Lat./Long.); Less than 4 km away
Tags: 1738 establishments, Buddhist temples in Taiwan, Places of worship in Taipei, Religious organizations established in the 1730s