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Variety of pork buns at 7-11 |
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winter meals at 7-11 |
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7-11 quick meals |
Taiwan has 4,800
7-Eleven (7-11) convenience stores, making it the
third highest in the world regardless of geographic size (Taiwan is about the size of
Connecticut!), and the densest internationally. There is a
7-Eleven at almost every single gate of Taipei Main Station
(TSR) and many neighborhoods in Taipei have them on every block. Why are
there so many? Coming from the US, I was accustomed to thinking of 7-Eleven as
a desperation road stop for directions, a dirty bathroom, lottery tickets, or for
a giant slurpy. But in Taipei, 7-Elevens offer services and quality goods that
are impossible to imagine: order a 10-course Thanksgiving dinner, you can
pay all your bills, buy tickets to a remote village, purchase tasteful winter
clothes, find rare California wines, obtain a rental agreement, send a fax, develop pictures, mail packages, or surf the web. Apparently, 80% of people in Taipei visit 7-Eleven at least
once a week. I buy my tickets to Nan’ao using the Chinese-only ticket machine
(took me 3 times to memorize the characters), for prepared salad (hard
to find), and freshly-cut papaya and guava. My cell phone plan is with 7-Eleven. One time I was looking
everywhere for shoe polish, I searched at least 20 stores. Where did I find it?
7-Eleven. A Fulbright colleague once told a group of us that 7-Eleven shipped a
large live fish to a remote mountain so his friends could make sashimi! I am
definitely partial to using the independent shops and food stalls in Taipei for
my meals and goods and I don't think anyone wants 7-Eleven to take over the
quaint and unique aspects of Taipei markets. But for paying bills, buying tickets,
and the occasional salad it’s wonderful.
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