The O'right soap: A fragrance of a wet forest after a spring rain, a scent that felt honest and unforced, like the earth itself waking up from a long slumber. The creamy lather felt like a small, temporary luxury against the skin, smelling of crushed pine and damp moss, which the youngest child noticed first while trying to sculpt a bubble beard in the wide, cool marble sink of our room at Tai Zhong Fu Hua Da Fan Dian.
The 16th-floor window: The pale, honeyed light of a Taichung March morning, a glow that turned the urban sprawl into a watercolor painting of muted greys and shimmering golds. There was a distant, rhythmic hum of traffic that sounded like the city's own breathing, a reminder that the world continues its frantic rush while we remain suspended in a pocket of peace, which the eldest daughter noticed first as she pressed her forehead against the cool, vibration-free glass.
The tea egg at breakfast: The marbled brown of the shell, a pattern resembling a topographical map of some forgotten, ancient island. The saltiness lingered on the tongue like a nostalgic memory of a bustling street market, paired with the warmth of the egg held between small, eager palms—a simple, grounded joy that the father noticed first while watching the kids struggle with their linen napkins amidst the clink of porcelain.
The room's expanse: The way the air felt open and breathable, the generous distance from the solid wood bed to the marble bathroom that allowed for a slow, meandering walk in the middle of the night. There was the echo of a sudden, unplanned laugh that filled the space and bounced off the high ceiling, a sound of pure liberation, which the mother noticed first when she realized that at Tai Zhong Fu Hua Da Fan Dian, there was finally enough room for everyone to simply exist without colliding.
The Fuxing Zong: The rough, organic texture of the bamboo leaf, peeling back to reveal a deep, savory aroma of soy and time. The sticky sweetness of the rice felt like a tangible link to a family history we don't always talk about, a taste that didn't just feed the body but anchored the soul to the earth, which the grandfather noticed first, his eyes closing for a moment as the flavor returned him to a different, quieter decade.
A single, discarded sock resting on the polished marble floor.
- Visit the 16F Haihua Lou for a view that makes the city feel small and manageable.
- Let the kids run in the large rooms; the space is the best amenity.