You’ve made it to the end... and Taipei has probably made its point.
From a palace turned office to avenues where law arrived in stone and symmetry, then on to a park that learned to hold grief without ever quite taming it, this walk kept asking the same impolite question... who gets to decide what a city remembers?
You heard it in the traffic hum, in temple bells, in the shuffle past old brick arcades, and in the curl of incense near neighborhood shrines that have outlasted governments with the patience of seasoned grandparents. Even the old Dingxiaojiao conflict still lingers here, not as gossip alone, but as a reminder that local loyalties can be every bit as stubborn as official power.
As you leave Wanhua, carry this with you... in Taipei, history does not sit behind glass. It keeps borrowing the same streets, the same stones, the same prayers, and asking each generation to answer back.


