The Dark Line Path | mICHELE & mIQUEL + dA VISION DESIGN

The Dark Line Path, In 2018, a contest was called to create a hiking route between Mudan and Sandiaoling that included 2 historic railway tunnels and a connection, to be invented, to replace the bridge over the Keelung River washed away by floods.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

We took a clear option: to preserve the post-industrial landscape with all its historical and ecological depth. The passage of time has produced, along this route, structural, ecological, atmospheric, acoustic, chromatic, and luminous changes, which are the heart of our proposal.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

However, strong interventions were necessary to open the route to the public. The challenge was to hide the efforts of the project and the work to let the old infrastructure and the landscape speak for themselves.

The Dark Line Path | mICHELE & mIQUEL + dA VISION DESIGN

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

The first choice was the material. Iron constructs a new “railway.” The 16mm diameter corrugated steel bars make up all the visible material.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

The gaps left between the bars reveal the powerful action of nature, revealing the rocks and silt in the tunnels, and the lush vegetation in the gorge.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

By gradually stretching and folding, they draw all the elements of furniture: railings, benches, bike racks, kilometer points…

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

An adapted construction system. To adapt to the complex configuration of the site, the project takes advantage of the specific conditions of construction in Taiwan. The country’s SMEs, on the border between industry and craftsmanship, are able to efficiently manufacture mass production, or perform “haute couture” work on site.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

Contrasting atmospheres. In the tunnels, we explore the depth of the ground and its cavernous darkness. Artificial lighting bathes the vault and the floor. It guides the steps of visitors and reveals, under the steel mesh, the variations of the original surface: ballast, rocks, silt, meandering water… The light reaches gently to the top of the tunnel arch, where bats hang.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

After the first tunnel, we arrive at the foot of a vertical well flooded with natural light. Sun rays filter through the foliage of trees suspended from the rock and, in contact with the vapors exhaled from the tunnel, produce an unreal atmosphere of a fairy tale.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

The second tunnel opens into the void of the cliff. Under the vault, a water mirror reflects the opposite shore in memory of the disappeared bridge. From the inside, the silhouette of the visitor is suspended between their reflection and the vegetation.

© LU Yu-Jui, mICHELE&mIQUEL

Sliding, on one side, the footbridge continues the route, like a long sinuous balcony, cantilevered over the gorge. We now discover, in full light, the succession of distant and uncertain reliefs. Here, on the canopy of lush vegetation, we walk among the tallest trees that emerge beneath our feet.

Project Info
Architects:mICHELE & mIQUEL + dA VISION DESIGN
Country: Taiwan, Ruifang District
Area: 30000 m²
Year: 2022
Photographs:LU Yu-Jui+mICHELE&mIQUEL
Design Team: Jerôme Lanche, Maria Fandiño, Giovanna Bartholeschi, Jean Orliac, Denis Wanders, Adrià Fenoll, Jerry Chang, Ming-Hsien Llu, Lilian Chang, Lin Yun-Jhu
Lighting Design: ARTEC 3 STUDIO
Structural Engineering: YU SHENG
Geotechnical Consultant: GEOLITHE
Tunel Structure: SINOTECH
Electrical Engineering: YUAN DIAN
Construction: DAO TIAN Construction Co., Ltd

Madeline Brooks
Show full profile Madeline Brooks

Madeline Brooks is a Projects Editor at Arch2O, where she has been shaping and refining architectural content since March 2024. With over a decade of experience in editorial work, she has curated, revised, and published an array of projects covering architecture, urbanism, and public space design. A graduate of the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Madeline brings a strong academic foundation and a discerning editorial eye to each piece she oversees. Since joining Arch2O, she has played a pivotal role in shaping the platform’s editorial direction, with a focus on sustainability, social relevance, and cutting-edge design. Madeline excels at translating complex architectural ideas into clear, engaging stories that resonate with both industry professionals and general readers. She works closely with architects, designers, and global contributors to ensure every project is presented with clarity, depth, and compelling visual narrative. Her editorial leadership continues to elevate Arch2O’s role in global architectural dialogue.

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