The door clicked shut with a metallic finality, sealing us into the muted elegance of Tai Zhong Shun Tian Huan Hui Jiu Dian. I remember the camel-colored walls of the Deluxe room, which seemed to absorb the heavy, pre-monsoon humidity of a Taichung May. The forty-two square meters of space felt like a curated gallery of earth tones, where the distance between the bed and the marble bathroom was a stretch of neutral territory we were both hesitant to cross. I watched the light filter through the city haze, landing in pale, dusty shafts on the polished surfaces. I wondered if the architecture of a room dictates the architecture of a conversation; here, the silence felt expansive, almost structural, allowing us to exist without the immediate need to fill the air with words.
I remember the scent of the soap—a clean, understated fragrance that clung to our skin like a secret. The carpet felt thick and indulgent beneath my bare feet, swallowing the sound of our movements as I watched the other person move through the room, their silhouette framed by the amber glow of the bedside lamp. I noticed the small, clumsy way they struggled with the packet of bath salts, a moment of spontaneous, quiet laughter that finally broke the tension we had carried from the airport. The air was viscous, clinging to us like damp linen, but as the warm water filled the deep bathtub, the room shifted into a sanctuary. I suppose we were both searching for a signal to slow down, to let the city fade into a blur of grey and green.
The Suspension of the Twenty-First Floor
There was one moment, however, that we both remember with a strange, synchronized clarity: the evening we spent at the infinity pool on the twenty-first floor of Tai Zhong Shun Tian Huan Hui Jiu Dian. We floated there, suspended between the humid night air and the shimmering surface of the water, looking down at the river of white and red lights that flowed along Taiwan Avenue far below. The traffic was a constant, humming current, a reminder of the world's relentless pace, yet from that height, the chaos felt rhythmic, almost musical. We didn't speak, but we shared the sensation of the cool water against our skin and the sight of the Taichung skyline stretching toward the horizon—a collection of glowing needles piercing a velvet sky. It was a shared anchor, a realization that the most honest way to experience a city is to hover above it, finding a portable home in the silence shared between two people who have finally stopped rushing.
A single, damp towel draped over the marble ledge, smelling of salt and sleep.
- Visit the rooftop pool at dusk to watch the city lights ignite.
- Savor the warmth of fresh soy milk at the breakfast buffet.