The Sanzhi UFO Houses (Chinese: 三芝飛碟屋; pinyin: Sānzhī Fēidiéwū), also known as the UFO houses of Sanjhih, Sanjhih pod houses or Sanjhih Pod City, were a set of abandoned and never-completed pod-shaped buildings in Sanzhi District, New Taipei, Taiwan. The buildings resembled Futuro houses, some examples of which can be found elsewhere in Taiwan.[1][2][3][4] The site where the buildings were located was owned by Hung Kuo Group.[5]
Sanzhi UFO Houses | |
---|---|
三芝飛碟屋 | |
General information | |
Type | Resort |
Architectural style | UFO |
Location | Sanzhi, New Taipei, Taiwan |
Groundbreaking | 1978 |
Construction started | 1978 |
Construction stopped | 1980 |
Demolished | 2010 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 2 |
Construction and abandonment
editThe UFO houses were constructed beginning in 1978.[5] They were intended as a vacation resort in a part of the northern coast adjacent to Tamsui, and were marketed towards U.S. military officers coming from their East Asian postings.[6] However, the project was abandoned in 1980 due to investment losses as well as several car accident deaths and suicides during construction, which is thought to have been caused by the inauspicious act of bisecting the Chinese dragon sculpture located near the resort gates for widening the road to the buildings.[5][6] Other stories indicated that the site was the former burial ground for Dutch soldiers.[7]
The pod-like buildings became a minor tourist attraction due in part to their unusual architecture.[6] The structures became the subject of a film,[8] used as a location by MTV for cinematography, and became a subject in online discussions, described as a ghost town or "ruins of the future".[9]
Demolition
editThe buildings were scheduled to be torn down in late 2008, despite an online petition to retain at least one of the structures as a museum.[10] Demolition work on the site began on December 29, 2008, with plans to redevelop the site into a tourist attraction with hotels and beach facilities.[5]
Some sources indicate that most of the houses were demolished in 2010, and the site was in the process of being converted to a commercial seaside resort and waterpark.
In popular culture
editThe site features in one of the sequences of the 1987 action film White Phantom.
The houses appear in a multiplayer map as part of the Apocalypse DLC map pack in the 2012 video game Call of Duty: Black Ops II.
The houses are referred to in the title of a track on the German pianist Hauschka's 2014 LP Abandoned City.
See also
edit- Futuro house
- Wanli District, New Taipei, an area known for similar architecture
References
edit- ^ archINForm Archive: Futuro House, retrieved 13 June 2011
- ^ Hive mind search for 'Peggie Scott', retrieved 13 June 2011
- ^ Photos by flickr user 'city tales', February 2010, retrieved 13 June 2011
- ^ Photo Archive 2008-12-17 for flickr user Peggie Scott, retrieved 13 June 2011
- ^ a b c d Chuang, Jimmy (29 January 2009), "FEATURE: Taipei County looks to rebuild site of weird UFO houses", The Taipei Times, retrieved 2 January 2010
- ^ a b c 黃, 其豪 (21 January 2008), 網友以訛傳訛 三芝飛碟屋變鬼屋, Liberty Times (in Chinese), retrieved 28 November 2009
- ^ Chang, Leo (22 September 2008), "Taiwan's deserted "UFO houses"", The Observers, France 24
- ^ First-ever Taiwan-Sweden co-production film to begin shooting in Sanzhi, archived from the original on 24 September 2015, retrieved 2 December 2012
- ^ 黃, 其 (25 December 2008), 三芝飛碟屋 下周一開拆, 聯合報 Udn.com (in Chinese), retrieved 29 November 2009
- ^ 洪, 哲政 (28 December 2008), 三芝飛碟屋明天拆 網友求情「留1棟」, Apple Daily (in Chinese), retrieved 28 November 2009
External links
edit- Photo set on Flickr
- Another photo set on Flickr
- Videos of the pod houses
- Photo gallery at File Magazine
- UFO Houses: The "Ruins of the Future"
25°15′39″N 121°28′40″E / 25.2609591°N 121.4776754°E