Jiufen, Taiwan

This Paper products features original artwork from our time in Jiufen, Taiwan.
Paper products / Visual Study
Regional Dossier

JIUFEN, TAIWAN | 'A lantern-lit village clinging to the clouds above the Pacific'

Perched on steep hillsides north of Taipei, Jiufen tumbles down verdant slopes in a cascade of red lanterns, winding stone staircases, and teahouses that seem to float in the mist. This former gold rush town transformed from a remote mining outpost into one of Taiwan's most atmospheric destinations, where narrow alleyways reveal century-old architecture and the scent of taro balls mingles with mountain fog. The village gained renewed fame as rumored inspiration for Studio Ghibli's Spirited Away, and walking through the lantern-glow at dusk makes the connection feel inevitable.

The watercolor palette here shifts with the weather and hour. Morning fog brings soft grays and muted ochres that dissolve architecture into suggestion, while late afternoon sun ignites the red lanterns against deep forest greens and the cobalt shimmer of the Pacific far below. Twilight transforms everything into burnt sienna, vermillion, and touches of gold that seem to glow from within the paper itself.

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Finding the Stillness

It's hard to put the "vibe" of a place into words, so we put together a few images that we think show the quiet side of Jiufen, Taiwan. These are the textures and small moments we've archived to capture the stillness of this corner of the world.

Jiufen, Taiwan visual study 01
Jiufen, Taiwan / No. 01 via Shun Idota
Red lanterns glow against weathered wooden buildings that cascade down the hillside, their warm interior lights just beginning to compete with the fading daylight. The misty mountains dissolve into a pale sky behind the tiered teahouses, while power lines cut across the top of the frame—a reminder that this famous old mining town exists in the present, not just in memory. Steam rises from somewhere in the maze of balconies and awnings, and the whole scene feels suspended between day and night, tradition and modernity.
Jiufen, Taiwan visual study 02
Jiufen, Taiwan / No. 02 via Nat Chen
Red lanterns glow warmly against the cool darkness, their paper skins illuminated from within and marked with black calligraphy. The light spills in soft circles, creating an enclosed feeling despite the open night air, while tiny golden bulbs twinkle somewhere in the background like distant stars. The atmosphere holds a gentle contrast—the warmth of the lanterns against the weight of surrounding shadows, a pocket of brightness suspended in the evening.
Jiufen, Taiwan visual study 03
Jiufen, Taiwan / No. 03 via Brandon Lee
The vendor's white cotton glove grips metal tongs above rows of grilled sausages, their casings tight and glistening with rendered fat. Behind the grill, an orange paper sign announces the day's offerings in bold black characters, its corners curling slightly from kitchen steam. A metal canister of bamboo skewers stands ready on the right, waiting to transform each sausage into portable sustenance for tourists climbing Jiufen's steep stone steps.

Where to wander

Archival Note: A curated field study of Jiufen, Taiwan, prioritizing cultural relevance and archival merit. While we haven't touched down here yet, we've meticulously vetted these locations through our global network of contributors to ensure they represent the most authentic atmosphere for your own expedition.

Local Cuisine Spotlight
This steaming bowl of noodle soup showcases plump fish balls and tender braised pork belly swimming in a rich, amber broth. The yellow wheat noodles curl beneath a garnish of fresh herbs, while soft-boiled eggs complete the hearty composition. Enjoyed through an open window overlooking Jiufen's misty mountains, the dish reflects the town's legacy as a gold rush settlement where miners sought warmth in simple, nourishing meals.
Credits: The Painted Passport
Local cuisine study in Jiufen, Taiwan

☕︎ Local Flavor

Ah Gan Yi Taro Balls

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1092 N, 121.8449 E

This third-generation shop hand-rolls taro and sweet potato balls each morning, creating those translucent spheres that bob in your bowl like jewels in shaved ice. The taro comes from Taoyuan farms, the sweet potato from local terraces, and the red beans simmer for six hours until they collapse into velvet. Sit by the window overlooking the valley and watch your breath mingle with the steam rising from your bowl.

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Lai Ah Po Yu Wan

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1095 N, 121.8445 E

Grandma Lai has been forming fish balls by hand since 1971, slapping the paste against her palm until it achieves that impossible springy texture. Her soup contains only mackerel caught that morning in Keelung, white pepper, and celery—a deceptive simplicity that reveals why this stall has outlasted fancier establishments. The line forms before she opens, locals clutching thermoses to take the broth home like liquid gold.

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Jiufen Teahouse

Rating: 5* | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 25.1089 N, 121.8443 E

Built in 1920 as a merchant's residence, this teahouse preserves the ritual of gongfu tea service on low wooden tables surrounded by embroidered cushions. The owner sources oolong from family gardens in Pinglin, each varietal expressing different mountain elevations through mineral notes and floral whispers. Pair your tea with osmanthus jelly or mochi filled with red bean paste, both made in the kitchen downstairs where copper pots gleam like sunset.

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Ayi's Peanut Ice Cream Roll

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1093 N, 121.8448 E

Watch Ayi shave blocks of peanut candy into fragile ribbons, then wrap them with ice cream and cilantro in a spring roll wrapper—an unlikely combination that dates to Fujian traders. The peanuts grow in sandy coastal soil and are candied with malt sugar, not refined white, giving them an earthy complexity. This snack sustained gold miners through long shifts, the fat and sugar providing fuel, the cilantro cutting through the richness.

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🛌︎ Boutique Stays

Jiufen A-Mei Teahouse Guesthouse

Rating: 5* | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 25.1094 N, 121.8447 E

The rooms above this historic teahouse offer narrow wooden balconies overlooking the valley where fog rolls in each evening like a silk curtain. You'll wake to the scent of oolong steeping in clay pots and the soft murmur of shopkeepers opening their shutters. The carved camphor wood beams and paper lanterns capture the Japanese colonial aesthetic that inspired Miyazaki's Spirited Away, but this is no replica—it's the genuine article.

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Skyline B&B

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1087 N, 121.8456 E

Perched on the mountain's edge, this family-run guesthouse offers floor-to-ceiling windows that frame the Pacific Ocean and Keelung Harbor below. The owner, Mrs. Chen, serves homemade taro cakes each morning and shares stories of Jiufen's gold rush days when miners crowded these very slopes. Request the corner room where you can watch fishing boats return at dawn, their lights like scattered pearls on dark water.

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Jiufen Wonderland

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 25.1101 N, 121.8441 E

This boutique hotel renovated a row of 1930s merchant houses, preserving original stone walls while adding heated floors and deep soaking tubs. Each suite features antique mining equipment turned into sculptures and windows positioned to capture specific views—temple roofs, mountain ridges, or the famous red lantern alley. The rooftop terrace serves local wine made from mountain grapes, a quiet luxury in this otherwise bustling village.

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Mining Life Homestay

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1098 N, 121.8439 E

Three generations of the Lin family have lived in this stone house built into the mountainside, its walls still bearing marks from mining tools. The grandmother demonstrates traditional tea ceremonies using water drawn from the mountain spring that once served the miners. Sleep on tatami mats under quilts filled with silk floss, and you'll understand why travelers stayed in Jiufen even after the gold ran out—the warmth here isn't from the ore.

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📍︎ Field Study

Shengping Theater

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1096 N, 121.8442 E

This abandoned cinema opened in 1962 when Jiufen teemed with miners seeking entertainment after dark, its art deco facade still bearing faded characters advertising long-forgotten films. Wooden seats remain scattered across the sloped floor, and projection equipment rusts in the booth like archaeological relics. The building stands as a monument to boom and bust, its silence more eloquent than any museum placard about economic cycles and human hope.

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Jiufen Old Street

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1091 N, 121.8446 E

This covered market street follows the original miners' path, its stone steps worn smooth by a century of feet carrying gold, groceries, and dreams. Red lanterns hang so densely overhead they create a crimson canopy, and steam pours from shops making peanut nougat, grilled squid, and sticky rice sausage. Come after the day-trippers leave, when shopkeepers sit outside their stalls playing mahjong and the street remembers its purpose as a neighborhood, not just a destination.

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Gold Museum

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1105 N, 121.8529 E

The museum occupies former Japanese mining headquarters, its colonial architecture intact down to the hinoki cypress ceilings and tatami reception rooms. You can enter the actual mine shafts, feeling the temperature drop as you descend into tunnels where men once worked by candlelight extracting ore from quartz veins. The 220-kilogram gold bar you can touch through a porthole offers a visceral understanding of why empires fought over these mountains.

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Teapot Mountain Trail

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 25.1121 N, 121.8573 E

This ridge trail climbs past abandoned mining ruins to a peak shaped like a teapot spout, offering views across the Pacific to distant Turtle Island. Wild tea plants grow along the path, descendants of bushes planted by Qing dynasty settlers, and ginger flowers perfume the air in summer. The hike takes ninety minutes, but arrive near sunset when golden light floods the valleys and you can see why miners believed these mountains held magic, not just metal.

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Typography

Archival Note: A formal technical study of Jiufen, Taiwan—archiving the coordinates, elevation, and environmental data that define the region. This data serves as a vital record for our ongoing global field study, allowing us to reconstruct the regional atmosphere with archival precision before our physical arrival.

Botanical and pigment specimen study for Jiufen, Taiwan Colors of Jiufen, Taiwan
Coordinates
25.1094° N, 121.8447° E - Northern Taiwan coastal mountains
Historical Epoch
Jiufen exploded during the 1890s gold rush, transforming from nine farming households into a roaring mining town. The ore ran out by the 1970s, leaving a ghost village that slumbered until the 1989 film A City of Sadness sparked revival as a nostalgic destination.
Elevation
250-450 m / 820-1,476 ft - hillside terraces above Keelung Harbor to mountain ridge trails
Atmosphere
Cfa - Humid subtropical. Rain falls frequently and fog arrives without warning, but that moisture is precisely what gives Jiufen its dreamlike quality and keeps the hillsides emerald green year-round.
Observation Hour
17:30 - The setting sun backlights the lanterns along Jiufen Old Street, turning red silk into glowing embers. The entire village shifts from atmospheric to otherworldly as mountain mist catches the golden hour and transforms stone steps into watercolor washes.
Primary Pigment
Lantern Vermillion (#D32F2F) and Misty Mountain Gray (#9E9E9E)
Best Time to Visit
October or November - the typhoon season has passed, the fog still rolls in dramatically, and autumn light gives everything a golden softness without summer's heavy humidity.
Avoid Visiting
January and February - winter rains arrive cold and relentless, the mist turns to drizzle that never quite stops, and many smaller shops close for Lunar New Year preparations.

Behind The Scenes

Nathan

Note from the Founder

Hey, did you know this fun fact about Jiufen, Taiwan? The iconic A-Mei Teahouse that allegedly inspired Spirited Away's bathhouse has never been confirmed by Studio Ghibli, but director Miyazaki did visit Taiwan before production. The teahouse owner embraces the mystery, neither confirming nor denying, letting the architecture and atmosphere speak for themselves.
Thank you for exploring the Jiufen, Taiwan series with us. We hope these notes have inspired you to add this incredible destination to your own passport—we are so glad you're here. — Nathan

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