As a tribute to mark the ascension of the
Emperor Showa in 1928, the Japanese government in Taiwan dismantled the
Qing dynasty government office in Taipeh (
Taipei) and began the plan to erect the . Construction began on 23 November 1932 and was completed on 26 November 1936.
Ide Kaoru, the main architect serving as chief engineer in Taiwan under the Japanese government, used the full cost of 980,000 yen and 94,500 workers. The four-story steel structure of the building was designed to be fire-resistant and to withstand severe earthquakes and typhoons. The original building was faced in light green tile to make it less visible to aerial bombers. The windows are adorned with classical designs in a Spanish Islamic style. With for the ground floor, the total area of the City Public Auditorium was , making it the fourth largest city Public Auditorium in Japan at that time. It was smaller than only the City Public Halls of Tokyo, Osaka, and Nagoya. After Taiwan's
handover to the
Republic of China in 1945 after World War II, the Chief of the Taiwan Provincial Administrative Office,
Chen Yi represented the Allies and accepted a formal surrender from the Japanese. The surrendering Japanese commander was Ando Rikichi, last Japanese Governor-General of Taiwan. The former Taihoku City Public Auditorium was renamed Chungshan (Zhongshan) Hall in honor of
Sun Yat-sen and functioned as an official meeting place under the Chinese government. The hall was one of more than 125 public halls which pre-dated the KMT's takeover which were either demolished or renamed to Zhongshan Hall. In addition new halls built by the KMT on military bases and in state-owned enterprise factories were also named Zhongshan Hall. Zhongshan Hall has always been one of the formal reception areas for welcoming foreign guests and diplomats. Former guests have included US President
Richard Nixon, South Korean President
Syngman Rhee, President of South Vietnam
Ngo Dinh Diem, Philippine President
Carlos P. Garcia, Iranian Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, and others. Zhongshan Hall has also hosted memorial ceremonies such as the signing of the
Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty and three formal inauguration ceremonies of the second, third, and fourth presidency and vice-presidency of the
Republic of China. ==Current use==