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Cheonggyecheon: Four Years On
Monday, 28 December 2009 11:12    PDF Print E-mail

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Take a Walk Down Seoul’s Iconic Restored Waterway

Written by Seo Dong Shin
Photographed by Ryu Seunghoo

The Cheonggyecheon stream is said to carry history on its ripples as it bisects the heart of Seoul. From the time of the Joseon Dynasty, when the naturally formed watercourses began to be refurbished into streams, through the Japanese colonial period and the Korean War, when it became a sewage mill for shantytown dwellers, and on to its period as an entombed symbol of the rapid industrialization and economic development experienced by the nation in the 1970s and 1980s—this stream has been through it all.

Pavements and elevated motorways, however, encased the stream for over half a century until 2000, the result of sprouting commercial areas and a lack of urban planning amid hectic development. Many Seoul citizens still remember how the area looked before the Cheonggyecheon restoration project. Its aura at that time could perhaps best be compared to the atmosphere under the Nagwon Arcade in Jongno around midnight these days—crooked alleys and busy vendors dotting the dark corners, shadowed by shabby-looking buildings.

Four years have passed since the completion of the three-year, 386 billion won restoration project. Now the sun shines on Cheonggyecheon, and its surrounding paths have established themselves as a retreat for citizens seeking leisure or a picnicking spot in the summer. It has also drawn many foreign tourists, who marvel at the sight of the stream as it flows among the formidable office buildings and busy traffic of central Seoul. The city government has been developing hiking courses and event venues to entice even more visitors.

Tale of Two Arts

How does it actually feel to walk down the stream? As you begin your walk at the Cheonggye Plaza end of the stream, the first thing that greets you is American pop artists Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen’s highly controversial piece of artwork entitled “Spring,” a small "turret" sea-shell set vertically on its wider end, and visualized as a rounded, colorful ribbon spiraling upwards some 20 meters and pulled apart to form a conical, open structure.

There is another sculpture along Cheonggyecheon that is worth checking out, one that is quite different from Oldenburg’s. Korean artist Lim Ok-sang's aluminum sculpture is of Chon Tae-il, a 22-year-old garment worker at Pyeonghwa Market who set himself on fire in 1970 to protest against a government that did not enforce labor laws and to draw attention to the plight of his fellow garment workers. The sculpture—raised thanks to donations from citizens—is located in front of the market, facing the stream's Beodeul Bridge, near Dongdaemun Stadium Station.

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A Walk Down the Stream—Events and Resources

Walking along Cheonggyecheon on a cold, wintry day is certainly less enjoyable than in the summer, when many children and their families can be seen playing with the water and hopping on the stepping stones that lead across the stream. In the winter, few people can be spotted during the day, and the contrast between the natural landscapes and the city along the stream is stark. On the one hand, there are thick reeds, a pair of wild ducks floating on the stream, ice frozen on willows, and wild berries of various colors. When you look up from the stream, though, there are high-rise office buildings, colorful neon signboards for shops and restaurants, buses and other traffic.

In an attempt to make Cheonggyecheon a more eventful place, more venues have been introduced in addition to the existing spots for light shows and digital arts performances. For example, the “Proposal Wall” is designed to give couples a chance to confess their love and propose marriage on a romantic bridge called Dumul, which means "the joining of two streams." You can find out more and submit a request for free at propose.seoul.go.kr.

Cheonggyecheon Museum, a glass-walled building shaped to emulate the stream, is a good place for history education, as well as a bit of nostalgia for those who remember the Cheonggyecheon of the past. The museum has recreated the Cheonggyecheon area of old very realistically, with many real-life products and street views that cannot be found anywhere in Seoul today.

Walking down the stream in one go is not recommended, as it can take about four to five hours. The Cheonggyecheon website offers hiking courses that break the stream in two. For an ordinary visitor, one leisurely walk starting from Cheonggye Plaza and another stroll around Dumul Bridge, where the Cheonggyecheon Museum and the Proposal Wall are located, should suffice.

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Places to Visit

Traditional Markets

The joke in the old days went that you could find anything in these markets, from a satellite to a cat’s horn. Such was the charm of traditional markets, consisting of a myriad of small shops dispersed in countless alleyways sprawling around Cheonggyecheon. Bangsan Market (accessible from Euljiro 4-ga Station or Jongno 5-ga Station) is still a very good place to find everything related to wrapping, while Pyeonghwa Market (Dongdaemun Stadium Station) is for clothes and textiles, and Se-un Plaza (Jongno 3-ga Station) is for lighting, electronics and sound equipment.

Cheonggyecheon Museum

The Museum has resourcefully created permanent exhibitions that show past and future visions of Cheonggyecheon in detail, as well as its redevelopment process. It also has other showrooms that feature temporary exhibitions. An exhibition on Indian mythology is taking place until Feb 28. Near Jegi Station. Open 9am—9pm on weekdays, 9am—6pm on weekends and holidays. Visit http://museum.seoul.kr/cgcm.

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Club Rehap

The first club that ventured outside the established club zones in Seoul such as Hongdae and Gangnam. Opened just two months ago, it seeks to maintain a hip look, serving as a venue for various themed parties as well as a lounge bar. www.rehap.co.kr

Hwangsogojip

This place is universally recommended and visited by those in the know. It is not a fancy restaurant catering to tourists, but a cheap and reliable eatery for office workers and daily laborers working around Cheonggyecheon. It serves pork spiced, sliced and cooked in the Korean style with several side dishes and rice, and has commanded a loyal following since 1990, when it opened near Cheonggyecheon's Samil Bridge, close to Jonggak Station. T. (02) 722-5747.

Seoul Festival of Lights!

Thru Jan 24, the Gwanghwamun area—including Cheonggyecheon—will be lit up in a festival of lights. The light shows and light installations make it one of the best times to visit the stream. Be sure to bring your camera.

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Last Updated ( Monday, 28 December 2009 11:33 )
 

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SEOUL WEEKLY of this week

[Seoul Selection] Andy Warhol, The Greatest

Andy Warhol, The Greatest
Seoul Museum of Art Hosts Korea's Largest Warhol Retrospective

With more exhibitions to his name than any other artist in the last ten years, Andy Warhol vies with Pablo Picasso every year for first place when it comes to auction sale values. Twenty-two years after his death, Warhol's reputation and the value of his works continue to grow exponentially as he enjoys fame among art lovers and the general public alike. Until April 4, Seoul Museum of Art is hosting Korea's largest-ever Warhol retrospective. Not originally an artist but an industrial designer, Warhol applied mass production, a key trend of twentieth century science and industry, to his art. The pop art movement that he led has had a lasting influence on both modern art and design.

VENUE: Seoul Museum of Art
DATE: Thru Apr 4
ADMISSION: Adults: 12,000 won, Youths: 10,000 won, Children: 8,000 won
MORE INFORMATION: (02) 548-8698, www.warhol.co.kr
GETTING THERE: City Hall Station, Line 1, Exit 1 or Line 2, Exits 11 & 12. Walk 5 minutes.




- Good tours of the DMZ are conducted by the USO (795-3028) and TOURDMZ (755-0073). For more information on their tours, click here (USO) and here (TOURDMZ).

- The Seoul City Bus Tour is a great way to explore the city of Seoul, especially if you're new to town. For more information, click here or call 777-6090.

- The Royal Asiatic Society conducts entertaining and informative tours to some of Korea's most historic sites. Click here for more information, including schedule.

- For self-starters, the Seoul City Tourism website has several walking tours and self-directed tours. You can also give them a ring at 2171-2461.

- The Korea Tourism Organization website is another great place to get information. If you're on the road, just call 1330 for up-to-date tourist information.




White Day

If you're one of those people that can enjoys spontaneity in a relationship and rejects occasions like Valentine's Day as commercial gimmicks, read no further. If you enjoy having your romantic consumer habits dictated by society and the calendar, however, you'll be pleased to know that Korea offers two days of gratuitous spending a year, for the price of one! That's right: romantic consumerism in Korea, like in Japan, peaks on both February 14 and March 14. February sees women expressing affection towards men with various chocolaty and sugary products, whereupon they wait another month for the favor to be returned. What's the point? Good question.
White Day was apparently invented in Japan---one source describes it as a "completely Japanese event", though it obviously exists in Korea and, apparently, Taiwan too. To expect a balanced, reciprocal flow of gifts between Valentine's Day and White Day, however, may be to wildly overestimate male generosity. The same source that claimed complete Japanese-ness for about White Day also maintains that "boys rarely return gifts to girls on White Day. Therefore, mothers whose boys are in elementary schools or kindergartens buy cookies or candies, and give them to the girls who gave chocolates to their boys."
Does White Day in Korea suffer from the same unsightly gender imbalance? If you're male and in Korea, be sure to spend lots of money and express your undying love this Sunday by buying a giant fluffy Louis Vuitton white chocolate polar bear or whatever it takes to avoid the wrath of your lover.

Written by Ben Jackson

The views of the writer do not necessarily reflect the views of Seoul Selection


A miscellany of high-quality hyperlinks from the week, courtesy of SEOUL editor-in-chief Robert Koehler.

The Korean film "Late Autumn," starring Chinese actress Tang Wei and Korean star Hyun Bin, will be filming in Seattle.

Catholic University of Korea professor Emely Dicolen-Abagat calls for the preservation of Hyehwa-dong's "Little Manila".

In the Korea Herald, Shannon Heit begins a two-part series on learning Korean.

Choco Pies and naengmyeon?

The FT talks with Korean-born Jeannie Cho Lee, Asia's only Master of Wine.

Raimund Royer talks oriental medicine in the Korea Herald.

The iPhone's success has prompted the rise of smartphones in Korea.

A poll suggests that Korea needs to do more to improve its image abroad.

The nation of Tuvalu has minted commemorative coins for Korean figure skater Kim Yu-na.

Honduras has appointed a Korean immigrant as its ambassador to Seoul.







Pink Martini---1st Live Concert in Seoul



Portland, Oregon-based "little orchestra" Pink Martini will help Korean fans celebrate White Day with a concert at AX-Korea. Formed in 1996 by pianist Thomas M. Lauderdale, Pink Martini blends Latin, lounge, classical, and jazz music.

VENUE: AX-Korea
DATE: Mar 13, 7pm
ADMISSION: 99,000 won
MORE INFORMATION: (02) 563-0595
GETTING THERE: Gwangnaru Station, Line 5, Exit 2. Cross the road, turn left and walk 5 minutes. The hall is located behind the youth center.




Yeongdeok Crab Festival


Head out to lovely Yeongdeok, Gyeongsangbuk-do to celebrate its specialty, the succulent snow crab. In addition to providing plenty of opportunities to dine on Yeongdeok snow crab, there will be cultural performances, fireworks, shaman ceremonies and even a chance to catch some snow crabs yourself.

VENUE: Yeongdeok-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do
PERIOD: Mar 12~14
ADMISSION: Free
MORE INFORMATION: (054) 730-6561, http://crab.yd.go.kr
GETTING THERE: It takes four and a half hours to get from Dong Seoul Bus Terminal to Yeongdeok by express bus. Take a cab from there.




Seoul Sisters Rugby Club Looking for Coaches!



The Seoul Sisters Rugby Club (ssrfc.com) is looking for coaches on Saturdays from 11am-12pm at Jamwon Pitch near Apugjeong Station. Please contact club representative, Robin Seila, at robin.seila@gmail.com if you are interested.



RAS-KB Tour: Traditional Brewery and Sanjeong Lake


The Royal Asiatic Society will be heading to a traditional brewery and lovely Sanjeong Lake on March 13. This tour offers an opportunity to discover how Korea's traditional liquors, such as makgeolli, are made. Visitors will learn the significance and steps involved in the process of producing makgeolli, maesil (plum wine), bokbunja (black raspberry wine) and other traditional Korean beverages. Whether you're a connoisseur of Korean liquors or just interested in observing the process, and maybe even trying your hand at making some, you won't want to miss this RAS trip. We will then visit the beautiful Sanjeong Lake. Surrounded by craggy peaks and graceful old pine trees, this snow-covered frozen lake brings on images of an oriental winter landscape scene on a hanging scroll. Sanjeong Lake is a reservoir, constructed in 1925, tightly confined and recessed in a deep valley. Mountains rise steeply from the lake's edge. The lake is rather small and its outlet makes a cascading waterfall, so the feel is perceptibly different to that of most other reservoir-lakes on the peninsula. For more information, click here.




At Home Everywhere and Nowhere

65 years have passed since the concentration camp at Auschwitz was liberated by Soviet troops. Visiting the German Bundestag in January this year, Israeli President Shimon Peres implored everyone to remember the cruel crimes committed by the National Socialists, emphasising the importance of remembering this atrocious act of genocide---especially by the younger generations. This is what the exhibition "At Home Everywhere and Nowhere" hopes to achieve. It will be opened by Martin Doerry on Wednesday, March 3. Over the span of several years, photographer Monika Zucht and author Martin Doerry travelled through Europe and America to talk to those that had survived Nazi Germany's concentration camps, those that had been sent abroad for their own safety by their parents, as well as those that had survived the Nazi years by living in hiding. An insightful body of work by Zucht emerged from these encounters, with interviews and essays by Doerry. The photos portray 23 individuals; they are some of the last representatives of a time when the Jewish presence in Europe was strongly felt.

VENUE: Korea Foundation Cultural Center
DATE: March 3~25
ADMISSION: Free
MORE INFORMATION: (02) 2151-6514, www.kfcenter.or.kr
GETTING THERE: City Hall Station, Line 2, Exit 9. Walk 5 minutes. The center is located inside of Joongang Ilbo bldg




The Art of SPIEGEL
Goethe-Institut Korea will be welcoming bestselling author Martin Doerry, a long-time member of SPIEGEL's chief editing team, for the opening of The Art of SPIEGEL. SPIEGEL is the most significant current affairs journal written in the German language; published worldwide, and with more than 6 million readers, it counts as one of Europe's leading journals. Founded in 1947, it obtained its widespread significance by fearlessly advocating democracy and freedom of press, and exposing countless political scandals within its pages. "The Art of SPIEGEL" will be showcasing more than 100 works by diverse 60 illustrators that have been commissioned and published by SPIEGEL over the last 50 years. Not only will this exhibition offer a unique insight into international politics and trends from contemporary history; it will also give you the chance to learn about the work that illustrators and editors put into producing a SPIEGEL cover illustration.



VENUE:
Korea Foundation Cultural Center
DATE: March 3~25
ADMISSION: Free
MORE INFORMATION: (02) 2151-6520, kfcenter@kf.or.kr
GETTING THERE: City Hall Station, Line 2, Exit 9. Walk 5 minutes. The center is located inside of Joongang Ilbo bldg.



These are just some of the diverse events taking place in and around Seoul. SEOUL Magazine's ever-expanding events section is colorfully designed and jam-packed with the latest information. For the complete round-up pick up a copy of SEOUL Magazine at any of the quality bookstores in the city and you'll never have to spend another month in the dark.



Good Eating
Some quality Korean street food at the historic Gwangjang Market.
Photo by Ryu Seunghoo.




Free Tickets for Inca Exhibit - Have you checked out the National Museum of Korea's "Great Myth and Mystery of the Inca Civilization" exhibit yet? Well, if you haven't, here's more reason to go: the museum will be giving out 25 free tickets (two tickets per person) on a first-come, first-serve basis---send an email to ehong@korea.kr. BE SURE TO INCLUDE YOUR NAME AND MAILING ADDRESS---the tickets will be mailed to you. This latest display of the mysterious Peruvian culture will feature 351 artifacts from major Peruvian museums, with 41 of them making their debut in Korea. For those fascinated by the medieval Andean civilization, this exhibit will be the perfect introduction to Peru's cultural heritage and history.

Mt. Bugaksan Hiking Routes Open - The last of Mt. Bugaksan's hiking routes opened to the public on Feb 27. It's now possible to hike from the Bukgak Skyway to the Bugak Haneul-gil. See this Korean newspaper article for a small map of the new routes.

Learn Korean Traditional Dance - Chumsae Dance School is offering lessons on Korean traditional dance. Morning (10:00---11:30, Tue Thu), afternoon (4:00---5:30, Mon Wed) and evening classes (7:30---9:00 Tue Thu) available. Classes are limited to 10 persons each. Tuition is 200,000 won a month. For more information, call (02- 762-7731).

KFCC Films - The Korea Foundation Cultural Center runs regular screenings of both Korean and foreign films, with subtitles. In March, however, there are no films screening. Check back later for more information.

Korean Language Classes - The Korea Foundation Cultural Center Offers free Korean language classes for foreigners residing in Korea. The classes, led by Korea Foundation volunteer teachers, are held at 7:00-9:00 pm every Monday, Wednesday and Friday (two classes at 4:00 and 7:00 on Wednesdays). Anyone interested in learning Korean language and willing to participate in the language class is welcome to join. For more information, click here.

Calling all photographers - SEOUL WEEKLY could use your help with our Everyday Koreans photo section. If you have a camera and enjoy snapping shots capturing everyday scenes in the Republic of Korea, send your photos in along with captions and a brief, one- line bio.

Send Your Event Info - If you would like to advertise any upcoming events you are organizing, please send us the press release material to reporter@seoulselection.com by the preceding Friday in order to appear in the following Tuesday's issue.

Freelance Contributors Wanted - SEOUL magazine needs writers who are fluent in both Korean and English. Writers should be able to interview Koreans and also have a strong interest in Korean culture. Send your resume and writing samples to reporter@seoulselection.com.

We Buy & Sell Used Books - Seoul Selection buys and sells used books in English. Unlike our regular selection of publications that specialize in Korea-related topics, our Used Book Section carries books on all subjects. It's all part of our effort to make life easier for the English-speaking community.

Publisher: Hank Kim /
Editor: Robert Koehler /
Designer: Suh Su Kyoung / Website Manager: Ray Hong
Seoul Selection reserves all intellectual property rights on information provided in this newsletter. Some event information has been provided by the Korea Foundation. The IPRs are protected by pertinent laws.
Seoul Selection Web Site: http://www.seoulselection.com
e-mail: hank@seoulselection.com tel: 734-9567 fax: 734-9563