This station serves as a transfer hub connecting the Metro Red Line and Orange Line, covering a large site area with 11 exits. Both the interior and exterior of the station resemble works of art. The four glass curtain wall and steel structure platform buildings were designed by Japanese architect Shohei Hirasawa, symbolizing "prayer," commemorating the beauty of life incident (or Kaohsiung incident) that occurred in this area. The public art "Light Dome" within the station was created by Italian master artist Narcissus Quagliata over four and a half years, combining glass artworks through glass, murals, and lighting, representing the universe's birth, growth, glory and destruction. It was ranked by the American travel website "BootsnAll" as the second most beautiful metro station in the world in 1979. The beauty of the island incident on 12/10/1979 (also known as the Kaohsiung incident or the Kaohsiung violence rebellion case at that time), the "beautiful island" magazine held a peaceful demonstration and "human rights conference" on human rights day in Kaohsiung. Leaders such as Hsieh Ming-teh, Hsu Yicheng, Lily Chen (Lu Hsiu-lien), Chen Chu, Hsu Hsin-liang, Hwang Hsien-chieh and others who pursued and contributed to Taiwan's human rights, allowing Taiwan to depart from authoritarian rule, prompting the government to lift the ban on political parties, lift martial law, open freedom of speech, media, and complete parliamentary elections.