← Back to Taiwan Hotel

07:30, the sixth-floor counter

The morning air in Changhua during February possesses a certain heavy grace, a damp, silver mist that clings to the glass and renders the world an unfinished watercolor painting. I often feel that the most honest moments of a family journey occur at this hour, where the children are suspended in that fragile state between sleep and hunger. The air smells faintly of toasted dough and steamed soy milk, a scent that feels like a warm blanket. As we gathered at the sixth-floor counter to collect our breakfast from Yonghe Soy Milk, the heat of the containers seeped through the paper into our palms. My youngest suddenly whispered, asking if the milk was made from clouds because of the fog outside. There is a particular kind of holiness in these unplanned questions—a reminder that attention is the only real currency we have before the day begins to demand its toll.

14:00, returning to the room

After a morning spent tracing the geometric arcs of the Fan-shaped Train Depot, where old locomotives rest like tired iron giants in their concrete stalls, we retreated to the sanctuary of Taiwan Hotel. The children had reached that specific threshold of exhaustion where they became wonderfully erratic, the eldest clutching the hotel key as if it were a sacred relic. Stepping into the room, we were greeted by a surprising sense of space; the linens felt crisp and cool, a clean slate for the afternoon's collapse. We found ourselves laughing at the transparent bathroom walls that made us all a little shy, yet somehow more connected in our vulnerability. I suppose there is something about the way a space is designed—the hum of the air conditioning and the quiet efficiency of the lounge—that allows a family to stop performing the role of the perfect vacation and simply exist in the shared, messy comfort of being tired together.

19:00, the glow of Baguashan

Evening arrived with a sudden drop in temperature that turned our breath into small, fleeting ghosts, leading us toward the Moon-Shadow Lanterns at Baguashan. The light was soft, filtered through a thousand colorful fabrics that cast a kaleidoscopic glow over the wet pavement. The children's hands were small and cold in ours, a physical tether in the drifting crowd. We stopped for local meatballs, the savory rounds drenched in a thick, sweet soy-based sauce that tasted of tradition and patience. The warmth of the food contrasted sharply with the biting winter wind, creating a sensory friction that made the moment feel more vivid. The joy of these walks is not found in the destination, but in the way the cold forces us closer, turning a simple stroll into a collective effort of warmth, where the only thing that matters is the sticky residue of sauce on a thumb.

22:00, the adult's silence

Now that the children have finally succumbed to sleep, the room at Taiwan Hotel has shifted into a different frequency—one of profound, earned stillness. I stood in the bathroom, noticing how the ventilation kept the air dry despite the winter humidity, the tiles under my bare feet holding a lingering, comforting warmth. It occurs to me that home is not a fixed point on a map, but a portable rhythm we carry with us: the way the children breathe in unison, the specific way the city lights fade over the horizon. Writing this now, I feel that the true luxury of this stay is not the amenities, but the permission to be still after a day of constant motion. There is a strange, quiet belonging in a room that belongs to no one and everyone, a temporary anchor in the drifting current of our travels.

Two small shapes curled under a heavy duvet.

  • Savor the Yonghe Soy Milk breakfast on the 6th floor for a cozy start.
  • Explore the Fan-shaped Train Depot to see the historic rail architecture.

Nearby Food & Attractions

ABees

ABees (formerly Jia-Feng-Mi) is a creative cafe at 215 Zhang-Shui Road in Changhua City, where the menu tilts toward coffee, savoury galettes and dessert crepes. Signature plates include pollen-topped coffee, spiced tomato-zucchini crepes, kale-and-yam crepes, and cinnamon-apple-honey crepes, with most orders landing around NT$400 per person. Although opening hours are not posted, the high ratings and ever-rotating specials make it a popular queue spot for locals seeking something beyond the usual street food.

55 Eat

Chris Cafe

Chris Cafe is a tucked-away Hong Kong-style coffee shop in Taichung's Qi-Qi district, serving homestyle Cantonese comfort food. The star dishes are a deeply savoury 'sorrow-defying rice' — a char-siu egg rice made famous by Stephen Chow — and the indulgent peanut butter French toast that locals love. The dining room is calm and unhurried, ideal for a quiet break while shopping at Da-Yuan-Bai or exploring the Qi-Qi business district. Reservations are recommended so you don't miss the most popular plates.

75 Eat

Buer Fang

Bu-Er-Fang is the only bakery in Changhua County dedicated almost entirely to the classic yolk pastry, with nearly fifty years of history behind it. Each pastry is baked with buttery shortening into a deep golden flake, wrapped around a glistening salted duck egg yolk and a smooth red bean filling.每逢中秋或年节, queues of devotees snake around the block, making it the must-buy souvenir of Changhua. Beyond yolk pastries, the counter also offers mung-bean pastries and wife cakes — all old-school baked goods. Online orders are not accepted; the only way to taste them is to show up and queue in person.

59 Eat

Wuxianji Hotpot Lukang Flagship

Wu-Xian-Ji Hot Pot's Lukang flagship is a 496 Zhong-Zheng Road hotpot destination in Changhua County's Lukang Township, beloved for its stylish interior and comfortable lighting. Diners pick from a wide range of soup bases and order a la carte, with the main draws being the oversized meat platters and unlimited rice and drinks. Hours run from 11 AM to 2 AM, so even late-night cravings can be answered with a steaming pot. At NT$250-300 per person, the value is excellent and it regularly lands on lists of Changhua's must-eat hot pots.

121 Eat