Fomei Immortals Story Museum is located in a cultural-creative tourism park in Xiluo Township, Yunlin County. Established in 2015 by Fomei Buddhist Art Co., the museum’s chairman has deep local roots stretching back decades. To preserve Taiwan’s temple-worship culture, he promotes the origins and tales of deities, the meaning of ritual worship, and the spirit of religious moral exhortation, while vigorously advancing a modern aesthetic of Buddhist imagery in everyday life. By integrating refined religious crafts with the cultural-creative industry, the park brings these arts into contemporary living, boosts local tourism, sparks Yunlin travel conversations, opens innovative opportunities for cultural enterprise, and invigorates regional business.
The site is divided into zones. Its main hall—the Fomei Immortals Story Museum—was conceived and executed under the devout vision of Chairman Lin Kuo-Chen, presenting a superb “museum of religious aesthetics.” The visitor route is arranged around themed areas of immortal tales, introducing folk beliefs and deity stories: from the Five Religious Sages, Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors, the Three Pure Ones of Taoism, the Five Gods of Wealth, Mazu, Guanyin Bodhisattva, to the sixty Taisui star-lords. Tourists seem to wander through a celestial paradise, gaining a comprehensive understanding of world religious cultures and immortal legends, while the spiritual essence of each faith and the significance of worship are woven into every step of the guided journey.