In 1900, then Japanese Governor of Taiwan
Kodama Gentaro (兒玉源太郎), who himself was affiliated with the same sect, requested monks from the Rinzai school (of Zen Buddhism in Japan) to come to Taiwan, build a temple, and promote Zen Buddhism on the land nearby the (then) newly constructed
Taiwan Grand Shrine (台灣神社). The first abbot who also oversaw the construction was Kodama Gentaro’s university classmate, Umeyama Genshu (梅山玄秀), at the time of the invitation, already a well known monk in Osaka.{{ cite news |author=Josh Ellis|title= Huguo Zen Temple|year= 2017|website= Josh Ellis Photography Large scale Japanese temples in Taipei include
Shandao Temple, Donghe Chan Temple, Linji Hugou Chan Temple, etc., but only the main hall of the Linji Temple was preserved. In year 1984, in cooperation with the municipal government in order to expand the street, the main hall was moved to the North, and Yuenmen Street became the new point of entry and exit, and the alignment of the main hall was also changed from South-North to East-West (90 degree turn). With this move, the old temple gate and main hall axis was altered. . In April 2007, the Taipei Municipal Government has allocated NT$18.05 million for the reconstruction project. ==Visitor Information==