Posts Tagged ‘Seongdong-gu’

Oksu Station (옥수역) Line 3 – Station # 335, Jungang Line – Station # K114

December 9, 2012

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Sitting on the north bank of the Han, just across from Apgujeong, the area around Oksu Station has none of the cross-water district’s glam, though it’s not without its charms.  The west side of the station had relatively little that caught my eye, but it seems as though the neighborhood has undergone a fair amount of gentrification in recent years, with new apartments and churches populating this hilly area, along with new generation businesses like pie shops and combination clothing/toy stores that I noticed.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

The most interesting things here were south and east of the station, and we’ll start with the tiny sliver of Hangang Park (한강공원) that lies between the ITX tracks and the river.  Out an exit that’s not numbered but marked instead as 한강공원방면, a staircase descends to a thin section of the riverine park that’s largely shaded by the elevated highway and rail tracks that cut through the green caterpillar-like tube of the ITX station.  The pillars of the latter were decorated with paintings of flowers and of athletes ice skating, skiing, playing volleyball, and more.  The exercise equipment among the pillars was also decorated with cherry blossom designs.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Sunlight sparkled on the river as it crawled through its nearly 90-degree left-hand turn, while traffic passed overhead on the trisected Dongho Bridge (동호대교), vehicles on the outer two sections, Line 3 trains on the inner one, all held up by thick concrete legs that cut the midday sunlight and threw shadows across the water like a copse of trees.  On the banks were benches and bike lanes, which were being used by riders bundled up against the cold.  A bit to the east were some basketball courts, and past those, near some sandy banks where the Jungnang Stream (중랑천) empties into the Han, some boys were using the plaza between a small stage and some covered seating for a baseball game.

[Hi folks. Meagan here. As you can see, the day I visited Oksu was overcast and gray, a far cry from the bright, beautiful day Charlie documented. Please forgive the discrepancy.]

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

North of the park, and easily arrived at if you go out Exit 4, turn left and walk along Ttukseom-ro (뚝섬로), is Dalmaji Neighborhood Park (달맞이근린공원).  This terraced park occupies a hill between apartment buildings, with several small spots for badminton courts and exercise equipment and a small square with playground equipment and picnic tables at the park’s rear.  And in fact it would make a pretty decent spot for a picnic, as it seemed fairly quiet (There was only one other old man in the park when I went, on a Saturday afternoon.) and it offers good views over the river and the east-central part of town.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Coming from the station, the set of stairs leading into the park first brings you to Prospect Point (조망명소).  The most noticeable building visible from the point is the World Trade Center (무역센터) at COEX, and you can also make out Seoul Forest (서울숲), Cheonggye Mountain (청계산), and Gwanak Mountain (관악산).  Or, as I did, you might simply watch a hawk circle above the traffic curving around on the Gangbyeon Highway (강변북로) and listen to its loud whsssh, occasionally interspersed with the ticking of trains as they roll into and out of the station below.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Back at the station, or, rather, underneath it, is Oksu Station Square (옥수역 광장), a plaza with a small stage and what looked to be a fountain, though it was off for the winter.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Just north of the square, and across the street from Exit 7 is Mata Temple (마타사), resting just below the elevated Line 3 tracks.  According to the plaque on the temple site, the temple was founded in 888 by the nun Daewon in what is now Keumho-dong (금호동), just north of here, before being moved to its present location in 1115.  For 900 years it’s served as a monastery for Buddhist nuns, periodically having new structures erected, the most recent being a 1988 addition for laypersons and students.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

The hall closest to the entrance had pairs of dragon heads on either side of its door, and behind it was a small oven with a narrow red brick chimney and a small altar with an urn on top.  Occasionally a breeze would kick up and the chimney and altar would be showered in red, gold, and brown leaves from the trees above.  One of these was a protected Zelkova serrata, 20 meters tall and estimated to be 230 years old.

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Opposite the first hall was a pair of doors with door guardians painted on them.  These were much less fierce than the usual representations; their swords were at rest and there was a calmness in their gaze, unlike their usual aggressive, wild-eyed brethren.  Beyond the doors was a stone pagoda in a courtyard between two smaller halls, and next to one of these was a diminutive shrine.  A shelf ran around three of the shrine’s inner walls, ceramic candle holders and urns for joss sticks flanking a glass box.  Inside the glass box a small figure was seated cross-legged on a pillow.  I didn’t know whom he represented, but whoever he was, he was considerably more hip than your usual Buddhist figure, with a rakish moustache and goatee, and even a little soul patch tucked beneath his lower lip.

Hangang Park (한강공원)

한강공원 방면 Exit

Dalmaji Neighborhood Park (달맞이근린공원)

Exit 4

Left, Follow Ttukseom-ro (뚝섬로)

Mata Temple (마타사)

Exit 7

Oksu by Meagan Mastriani

Majang Station (마장역) Line 5 – Station #541

May 27, 2012

The further east you go along the Cheonggye Stream (청계천) the more the engineering of its western end gets stripped away and the more you’re able to step into its past.  The process culminates in the Cheong Gye Cheon Museum (청계천문화관) and Cheonggye Stream Shack (청계천 판잣집), close to where the stream begins its southerly turn near Yongdu Station (용두역), but just a bit further on you can come face to face with the Cheonggye’s sorriest period before you even leave the station.

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Near the exits at Majang Station is a terrific photo collage by the Japanese priest Nomura Motoyuki, who, between aid activities, photographed Seoul and, in particular, the Cheonggye shanty towns, from 1973 to 1985.  Compared with today, the Cheonggye of the 1970s is unrecognizable – the wood and tin shacks along its banks look ready to collapse at any moment, more reminiscent of a south Asian slum or refugee camp than anything that squares with notions of Seoul.  Kids with dirty faces play amid piles of trash and squalor, while another is bathed outside in a plastic bucket.

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They’re fascinating images to hold in your head as you make your way to the stream today, just a couple hundred meters or so from Exit 2 or 3.  It’s simple but pretty here: a plain stretch of water with some patches of reeds and grassy banks the color of hay.  On the opposite bank a high concrete wall blocks the wide series of tracks that lead to Seoul Metro’s Gunja Train Depot, and this and the flyway running overhead blunt the stream’s charm a bit but don’t detract too much.  There’s of course a two-lane bike path running along the stream, but you’ll also find what is one of the cutest features we’ve come across so far: the Children’s Bicycle Safety Experience Learning Center (어린이 자전거 안전 체험학습장).  This little patch of concrete is separated into two parts: one with S-curve patterns and figure-8’s for absolute beginners to practice on; the other, for slightly more advanced riders, having curving paths and gently banked curves, as well as miniature crosswalks, street lanes, and bike traffic signs for learning traffic rules.  Didn’t come with your own ride?  No worries – there are bike rentals available near the entrance.

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Walking to the stream from Exit 2 you might notice a sign advertising the Sancheong Medicinal Herbs Park (산청 약초 공원) at the stream, but when I arrived at its banks the only trace of the Herbs Park I found was the large sign marking its location.  The absence, I assume, was because I visited in February.  Just a few steps west of where the park was supposed to be was another streamside attraction,  the Cheonggyecheon Ecology Classroom (청계천 생태교실), a white canvas building with displays and dozens of rows of chairs inside, but this too was closed.

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A walk in the opposite direction, from Exit 4, past the Hankook store with its tires wrapped in gold foil like wedding bands for giants, will lead toward Hanyang University and Wangsimni.  After a bit you’ll both start to pick up a university vibe and clearly make out the enormous Bit Plaza complex off to your right.

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There’s a bit of the old school to the Majang area, readily visible on a small market street along Majang-ro-40-gil (마장로40길), which is the side street after U-turning from Exit 3 or 4.  Rough around the edges, there were just a few elderly hangers-on milling about, including an old ajumma wrapped up in mismatched scarf, hat, and jacket, bent over and pushing a low cart before she paused to wind up and spit a gob of unwanted saliva onto the street.

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After returning to the main street I swung right onto Majang-ro-42-gil (마장로42길), where a guy was doing some welding work on the corner, having run an extension cord out of his adjacent shop and across the sidewalk.  After sidestepping the sparks I continued on but nothing really caught my eye until just before the end of the street when I noticed a steep set of stairs labeled Salgoji-2-gil (살곶이2길) running up to my right, just the kind that I can’t resist exploring.

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I went up, and after winding through some narrow, concrete-paved alleys I found myself in a gravel and dirt parking lot in the middle of a rather isolated neighborhood that I couldn’t quite wrap my head around.  There was almost no one about, and it seemed part slum, part abandoned, though I couldn’t figure out how much of which.  There was a vegetable plot and a couple dirt paths winding around it and alongside buildings, some trash strewn here and there, and a single old woman sitting outside and keeping an eye on me.  There was something odd, yet at the same time quirkily endearing about the place, both traits likely brought about by its relative isolation from the rest of the area.

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Anyone familiar with Majang is probably wondering by this point When are they gonna get to the meat?  Don’t worry, we haven’t forgotten, for if there is one thing Majang is synonymous with, it’s meat.

For nearly half a century, since the city’s main meat market moved here from Jongno-gu in 1963, the Majang Livestock Market (마장 축산물시장), has been providing an estimated 70% of all beef consumed in Seoul.  Along with the country’s largest meat market, Majang-dong also used to house a number of slaughterhouses, but these were moved to Doksan in 1998.  Today the market occupies 28 acres and contains thousands of shops selling, in an oh-so-literal way, everything beef and pork related but the squeal.

You can get to the market by going out Exit 2 and then turning left on Majang-ro-35-nagil (마장로35나길).  This will take you past a pair of enormous white warehouses on your left, abandoned-looking and surrounded by high brick walls.  Upon first seeing them I surmised that this was where the old slaughterhouses used to be, and decided to walk around the large block to see if I could confirm or deny my suspicions.  I turned left on the street just before the wall, which was lined with butcher shops with shiny metal hooks dangling from runners in the ceiling.  As the wall lowered I could partially make out a huge pile of twisted scrap metal in the yard in front of the first warehouse, and when I reached the opposite side this was revealed to be a storage space for KEPCO, the Korea Electric Power Corporation.  The second warehouse, of which I could only make out a gutted-looking second floor poking above the wall, was less clear.

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Just past a brand new elementary and middle school is the market’s south entrance, a large arch overhead reading ‘Welcome to Meat Market.’

For anyone whose trip back up the chain from dinner plate to farm has gone no further than plastic-wrapped Styrofoam trays at the grocery store, Majang Meat Market will be an eye-opening experience, in a good and honest way.  It’s important to know what your food is, and was, and Majang takes you about as close to the present tense as one can go.

Stepping under the arch I glanced down and noticed a spot where the top of the asphalt had chipped away; the exposed pavement had a rusty hue, perhaps actually having been stained by years of blood.  Inside, brigades of rubber-smocked butchers were hard at work, one feeding a slab of meat through a band saw, creating a sound like electrified nails on a chalkboard, while nearby the team in another shop went about their business decked out in all white smocks and caps, which led me to wonder a) why butchers seem to always be portrayed wearing white, and why they actually often do in real life, and b) how every butcher I’ve ever seen dressed this way has never had a single stain on their shirt.

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What was once an animal, at the market was deconstructed into product.  It dangled from pegs on walls, rolled by on dollies, was ground into chuck, or was sliced and wrapped in plastic.  Enormous ladders of ribs hung from industrial hooks, sheets of offal bathed in tubs of cold water like lazily soaking laundry, entire pigs stretched out on metal tables, and the gray shag carpet of intestines was folded over itself in wide heavy flaps on plastic sheeting.  Triangular pig ears were spaced evenly on one table and bowls of kidneys looked like mammoth gelatinous versions of their namesake beans.  On one counter sat a loose mandible, decoupled from its former body and sawed in half, and hanging from a hook were several pairs of what I was pretty certain were bull testicles.  Several stalls were selling tails.  The skin had been peeled off and what was left was menacing and surprisingly powerful-looking, like an alien’s tentacle.  There were also entire cow heads, skinned but with the horns still attached.  Some of these had been wrapped up in heavy fuchsia plastic, the sort of thing I imagined seeing mounted on the bedroom wall of a cattle rancher into S&M.

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The amount of meat at the market was tremendous, almost overwhelming.  I marveled at how so much could be consumed – that this market, which contained more beef than I had ever seen in my life, by many magnitudes, represented only a small fraction of what was consumed nationwide, and that this represented only a single day in a single country.

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It may have been because the heavy scent of protein in the air was going to my head, but as I wandered around the market I felt increasingly happy.  In a decade that has thus far been defined by political and economic malfeasance, it was heartening to be completely surrounded by people pursuing truly good, honest work.  There were a few shoppers in the market, but on a late Tuesday morning it was populated overwhelmingly by people just doing their jobs.  A man in a tiny room on a side alley fed a huge chunk of meat through an auto-slicer, cutting it up into thin ½ cm strips.  A steady stream of mopeds and trucks rumbled about, picking up and delivering.  In one stall, a middle-aged woman tended to nothing but pig heads, using a coarse brush to remove any excess hair before they could be sold.  (Has anyone else ever noticed how pig heads all seem to have a faint smile on their face?)

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Along with the sales of beef and pork, a number of cottage industries have naturally arisen in the market to cater to the workers.  I watched a woman push a cart through the aisles, selling lunches of toast and ramen to the butchers.  A man in a corner stall sold rice cakes and dried seaweed, but business was slow and he was nodding off.  On one of the market’s main aisles I spotted a sign for a barber, its accompanying pole spinning away, and tried to think of a single place where I would want less to get my hair cut.  Of course, there are also knife salesmen and knife sharpeners.  One of these had set up his electric whetstone in an underpass below some rail tracks, and as he applied a dull blade to the grinder the sparks from the metal on metal friction sprayed out like a roman candle, bouncing off the concrete wall in front of him.

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The first time that I visited Majang Market my companion and I were passed by a slowly cruising Mercedes with tinted windows, and I remarked, half-jokingly, that any Benz in a meat market must belong to the gangsters who provide ‘protection services.’  She responded that that was impossible.  There’s no way to verify the explanation for this, but it’s plausible and, at the very least, entertaining.  Although Korean gangsters, I was told, do in fact control many neighborhood markets in the country, largely in the, ‘Awfully nice market stall ya got here.  Be a shame if something happened to it,’ way, they leave Majang alone, not because the workers and organized crime have come to any sort of agreement, but because they’ve decided that thousands of people highly proficient in the use of all manner of knives, blades, and cleavers is one population it would be prudent not to
antagonize.

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Of course, the point of these dozens of acres and hundreds of shops is to feed yourself, and for anyone who loves beef or pork there literally is no better place in the city.  Majang is where you’ll get the freshest meat, bar none.  There are certainly a number of barbecue restaurants in the surrounding neighborhood, but you don’t even need to leave the market to eat.  The majority of eateries are clustered near the market’s north entrance, opposite the Cheonggye Stream.  These range from jokbal places to large restaurants that serve just about any cut of beef or pork you could want, including barbecue ‘sampler platters’ that include three or four different cuts.

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To get the fullest market experience, however, you might want to go full DIY.  Pick up whatever you want in the market and take it to one of the modest restaurants that will rent you a grill for just a few thousand won and serve up side dishes for just a few thousand more.  Take a moment to think about what’s brought your food here, throw it on the fire, dig in, and complete the chain.

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Cheonggye Stream (청계천)

Children’s Bicycle Safety Experience Learning Center (어린이 자전거 안전 체험학습장)

Exit 3

Sancheong Medicinal Herbs Park (산청 약초 공원) and Cheonggyecheon Ecology Classroom (청계천 생태교실)

Exit 2

 

Majang Livestock Market (마장 축산물시장)

Exit 2

Left on Majang-ro-35-nagil (마장로35나길)

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Sindap Station (신답역) Line 2 – Station #211-2

February 26, 2012

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Given that my visit to Sindap coincided with Seollal, coming out of the station’s one exit reminded me a bit of the scene in Westerns when the protagonist steps out of the saloon onto an empty street, the only things a’stirrin’ bein’ tumbleweeds an’ dust. And, OK, my imagination is getting away with me and I exaggerate, but it was awfully quiet. There was a normal-seeming flow of traffic – likely families on the way to and from relatives’ homes and gravesites – but the pedestrian traffic was thin to the point of almost not being there at all. There was one guy doing some stretching in Yongdap Neighborhood Park (용답 근린 공원), the small space just outside Exit 1. More of a plaza than a park, really, it did have a packed dirt basketball court, some exercise equipment, and a few benches.

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Sindap sits on one corner of a large intersection where Cheonho-daero (천호대로) and Majang-ro (마장로)/Sagajeong-ro (사가정로) intersect, and a cold January wind was whipping across the open space, past the low, 3-4-story older brick commercial buildings in brown, carnation, and burnt sienna.

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Behind the station is the Cheonggye Stream (청계천) and my aim was to get at it, but the tracks seemed to cut off access so I turned left out of the exit to see if I could find a way to it. I walked northwest several hundred meters, on the way making note of the bright cream, orange, yellow, and red Seoul Sindap Elementary School (서울신답초등학교), which had three large solar panels perched on the roof.

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Finally, just after the rail overpass where Line 1 trains rumbled north towards Cheongnyangni, I noticed a set of wood stairs, and these led up to a path down to the stream. Here, near where the stream starts its southward turn towards the Han, the waterway has almost none of the engineered character that typifies its more popular western end. It’s much wider, maybe four times what it is in Jongno, and lined on either side with thick beds of reeds, brown and crisp in the winter, that in some stretches were as tall as I was, blocking completely my view of the stream. The only thing in the stream that indicated an artificial touch were the stepping stone bridges leading from one bank to another, though it appeared as if, temporarily at least, the freezing over of the stream in spots had rendered them superfluous. This wasn’t a theory I was ready to put to the test, however.

As I got back near the station I came to see that I had taken the long way round by turning left out of the station instead of right. If I had done that and then followed it by another right onto Majang-ro at the intersection I would have noticed the path leading down to the stream just behind the car park.

The rest of the neighborhood seemed rather unremarkable, though pleasant enough. East of the station an (on this day at least) extremely quiet neighborhood sat squeezed between Cheonho-daero and the tall metal walls shielding it from the train tracks running parallel to the Cheonggye.

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The story was similar north of Cheonho-daero, though here at least there were some people grabbing some holiday exercise at the square block Gandeme Park (간데메공원). No one was using the badminton or basketball courts, but a few singles and couples were circumambulating the walking path or using the exercise equipment. The park seemed relatively new, with good playground equipment, and a couple features that would make it nicer in the warmer months: a rose arch, that for now was denuded, and an octagonal pavilion above a pond, which had been drained for the winter.

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Lastly, if you head to the corner of the intersection diagonal from the station, you can pretty quickly reach the west end of Dapsimni Antiques Town, which sits just one block back from Cheonho-daero. Of course everything was shuttered up due to the Lunar New Year holiday, but you can get an idea of what the Antiques Town is all about by checking out the post from our visit to Dapsimni Station.

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Yongdap Neighborhood Park (용답 근린 공원)

Exit 1

Cheonggye Stream (청계천)

Exit 1

Right out of exit, right on Majang-ro (마장로), Right on path after car park

Gandeme Park (간데메공원)

Exit 1

Northeast on Sagajeong-ro (사가정로), Left on Hwangmul-ro (황물로), Right on Dapsimni-ro-38-gil (답십리로38길)

Dapsimni Antiques Town

Exit 1

East on Cheonho-daero (천호대로), first or second Left

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Hanyang University Station (한양대역) Line 2 – Station #209

October 7, 2011

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Put on your varsity jacket and turn on your Vampire Weekend, we’re going back to school.

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Quite obviously, Hanyang University Station serves the campus of Hanyang University (한양대학교).  Founded in 1939 as the Dong-A Engineering Institute, Hanyang is one of Korea’s top schools and home to its most prestigious engineering program.  Exit 1 will drop you near the university’s main gate, though Exit 2 is actually more convenient for getting you on campus, as you come out right on Hanyang Plaza.

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The plaza is flanked to the east by the Administration Building, a four-story gray stone structure with columns and pediment, and to the north by another handsome stone building.  I took a seat on a ledge at the edge of the plaza for a few minutes to chill out and take in the students strolling back and forth alone or in pairs, and to watch one small group cross the plaza clapping and carrying a cake as they sang ‘Happy Birthday’ to their friend.  It was a good time to be visiting, with the first chill of fall lending a nostalgic back-to-school feel to the scene, and as I watched the students in their September plaids and cardigans I felt a curious tension between the feeling that it really hadn’t been that long since I was lugging my bag across Library Mall, and the sensation that I was now very much removed from that time in my life and the time that the kids in front of me were going through.

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One thing that perhaps let me feel at least not entirely disconnected was that, as anyone who’s spent time around a campus here has noticed, Korean university students dress much better than their Western counterparts.  You won’t find many sweatpants here and you’ll find far more heels.  Hanging out around Hanyang in the button-down I’d worn to work I fit right in, and it took me a full ten minutes to spot my first kid with hot pink hair and a guitar on his back.

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In general, I thought that the campus lacked some of the vivacity that characterizes most American campuses, and it wasn’t until I went by the music building where a couple groups of students were hanging out, laughing, and jamming on beat up couches that I really felt some of that directionless energy I remember being so common when I was in school.  Of course, the short time I spent there and my own nostalgia could be throwing off my judgment, but I do know that I couldn’t ever imagine my own school having set up speakers throughout campus to softly play classical music the way Hanyang had.

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Hanyang’s other buildings aren’t as pretty as those on the plaza; they’re modern and not especially notable, but the campus is nice enough, with lots of trees and shady paths.  Behind the Administration Building is a large sunken amphitheater where small groups of students sat spread out on the tiered half-circle of stone and grass seating.  In the rear of the campus is a large dirt athletic field where a baseball team was practicing, two adjacent soccer games were taking place, and there was even an American football team holding a lazy practice, halfheartedly working on field goals, the kicker dinking the first one off the crossbar before making good on the next.

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At least, I think the field is in the back.  Hanyang’s campus is deceptively big and hilly, and it’s fairly easy to get lost as a newcomer, as I more or less did for the better part of an hour.  I stumbled around for a while, going up and down hills, before finally coming close to getting my bearings and following an indicatively large flow of students out to the university’s main gate, which actually isn’t so much a gate as it is a plaza that funnels up into the school.

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So where do all these bright young things live?  Well, for those who don’t live with their parents, quite a few no doubt populate the neighborhood near Bit Plaza that we explored in our Wangsimni post; it’s just a 10-minute walk from Exit 1, a short ways past the main gate.  Many more certainly live in the neighborhood across Wangsimni-gil (왕십리길) that connects to Exit 4 via pedestrian bridge. Tucked behind and next to a large middle school and high school, this neighborhood also has a surplus of goshiwons (고시원) and goshitels (고시텔), as well as hasuks (하숙), boarding houses similar to goshiwons, the difference being that hasuks are often run by ajummas who may offer boarders a daily meal or two, as well as take care of their laundry.  Considerably less lively than the area near Bit Plaza, this neighborhood is devoid of bars, but does have a number of cheap restaurants and small convenience stores for ramen runs.

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Although it helps, you don’t have to be a student to hang out around Hanyang.  Simply go out Exit 3, alongside the rails as they prepare to go over the bridge crossing the Jungnyang Stream (중량천), and just before they do, take the stairs that go down to the street in front of the waterway.  This wide stream, which empties into the Han just a kilometer southwest, is crisscrossed by highways and flanked by bicycle and walking paths, which you’ll likely see a fair number of people taking advantage of.  The Jungnyang is also pleasingly flecked with rocks, giving the flow of water some texture.

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Arriving at the stream, the first thing I noticed was a wide pedestrian bridge just off to the left, the first third stone, the rest concrete.  This is the Salgoji Bridge (살곶이다리), at 76 meters the longest existing bridge from the Joseon Period.  Constructed between 1420, the second year of King Sejong’s reign, and 1483, the 14th year of King Seongjong’s, it linked Seoul to points southeast.  Despite the length of time devoted to its construction it’s a very modest structure; there are no rails or any other decorations.  The bridge’s construction consists of horizontal stone racks placed across rows of four stone pillars set upright in the streambed.  Parts of the bridge washed away in a 1920 flood, but the structure was repaired in 1972.  By that time, however, the Jungnyang had widened so it was necessary to add the concrete extension.  Historical Site No. 160, the bridge bears two names.  Its Chinese name is the Jeongot Bridge (전곶교), Salgoji being the pure Korean one.  According to the plaque near the bridge, the name Salgoji derives from an anecdote about an arrow that King Taejo, founder of the Joseon Dynasty, shot, which hit the pillar of the hut where his son, the future King Taejong was staying ‘while the two were at odds,’ which is an awfully cordial way of putting what very nearly amounts to filicide.

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Fortunately for visitors the bridge is still in use, and you’re free to have a stroll across, as many locals were doing when I visited.  An old guy had even clambered down to a tiny islet part way across to set up six fishing poles in the stream, hoping to catch a bite.

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East of the bridge is Salgoji Park (살곶이공원), tucked into the corner where the Cheonggye Stream (청계천) empties into the Jungnyang.  The confluence is a migratory birds protection area, and there are small signs of various birds that you might spot in the area.

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Between the bridge and the Cheonggye there is a small skate park where several rollerbladers and skateboarders were rather lackadaisically performing tricks, and an inline skating track where several teams of elementary school racers were practicing, most going around the oval in single-file lines, others working on their turns by skating in tight circles on the infield.  Beyond those are a pair of adjacent soccer pitches, on one of which an amateur samulnori troupe was practicing, clanging up a pleasant ruckus in the fading light.

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Hanyang University (한양대학교)

Main Gate

Exit 1

Campus and Hanyang Plaza

Exit 2

Jungnyang Stream (중량천), Salgoji Bridge (살곶이다리), and Salgoji Park (살곶이공원)

Exit 3

Straight on Wangsimni-gil (왕십리길), down stairs just before the bridge

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Wangsimni Station (왕십리역) Line 2 – Station #208, Line 5 – Station #540, Jungang Line – Station #K116

October 2, 2011

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Seoul Suburban would like to thank Meagan Mastriani for inviting us to and showing me around her work neighborhood of Wangsimni.  Meagan writes about food, mostly, and you can check out her take on the local dining scene at her column, Savoring Seoul, in the online magazine Honest Cooking.

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I met Meagan on a recent Sunday outside Exit 9 and, being a bit of a foodie, naturally one of the first places she took me was to a small bakery, Bonnie’s kitchen (바니스), that specializes in cakes and cupcakes.

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Hanging a U-turn from the exit and then a right on Wangsimni-gil (왕십리길) brought us to the bakery, which looks like the manifestation of a very domestically-minded eight-year old girl’s fantasy: the interior is all whites and pastel pinks, and is decorated with paper chain ponies.  Cakes on display in the window ranged from one decorated with the nearby Hanyang University insignia to one topped with a Barbie doll to one bearing the goggled visage of Pororo.  Unfortunately the bakery was closed so I couldn’t sample the goods, but Meagan vouches for their deliciousness.

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If your interest in cupcakes is as constructive as it is destructive, Bonnie’s also offers baking classes.  Your Korean need not be impeccable either, as Bonnie spent time living in New York, where she learned how to bake, and speaks excellent English.

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Update from Liz: When I stopped by, Bonnie’s Kitchen was open!  Bonnie, who prefers to go by her Korean name, Seo-Young, is super nice and informed me that the kitchen no longer sells cupcakes on the go. You can call and pre-order a minimum order of six cupcakes. She was surprised Seoul Sub→urban was interested in her store, but appreciated the opportunity and voiced her apologies that she no longer sold cupcakes on the fly to the foreigners who used to stop by frequently. We chatted for a little bit while I admired her handiwork and assured her I would be linking her bakery up to our post.  For information on how to order her adorable cupcakes or sign up for a cooking class, please visit Bonnie’s Kitchen Blog.

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On your way to the bakery you’ll pass the Seongdong Culture Hall (성동문화회관) and the Soweol Art Hall (소월아트홀), but the real attraction is just outside, in the adjacent park where, at all hours of the day, you’ll find old men gathered to play baduk (바둑), the Korean version of Go, and janggi (장기), a Korean version of chess derived from the Chinese Xiangqi.  It’s strictly an old boys club, but the dress code is relaxed, ranging from suits to utility jackets.  The men congregate around park benches in groups of three or four or half a dozen, but there’s very little chatter.  Almost to a man they’re focused on the games, and the most prominent sound in the park is left to the gentle clicking of stone on wooden board.

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By far the most dominant feature of the Wangsimni area is the enormous Bit Plaza (비트프라자) complex at the east end of the station, and it’s easy to get your bearings from anywhere in the vicinity by looking for the huge tower with the mother-of-pearl-esque sheen on it.  The complex covers a large area and different parts are accessible from different ways, so we’ll break things down by their nearest exit.

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In front of the complex proper is a bifurcated plaza, and as you come out of Exit 4, directly across the small access road is a bust of 김소월 (Kim So-Weol), which was the pen name of 김정식 (Kim Jeong-Shik), one of early modern Korea’s greatest and most influential poets.  Kim died by his own hand in 1934 at the young age of 32, having published only one book, Azaleas, when he was 25.  His poem entitled ‘Wangsimni’ is engraved on a stone slab next to the bust.  For a bit more on Kim’s life, you might want to read this short piece in the Korea Times by the always excellent Andrei Lankov.

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Behind the memorial is a small black and gold clock tower called the Lover’s Clock, which was erected to commemorate Seongdong-gu’s sister city relationship with Cobb County, Georgia, the placement of the apostrophe suggesting that it’s a rather one-sided relationship.  On the same side of the plaza and just in front of the complex is the --바람의 or 걷고싶은 비트거리 (Road of Light, Water, and Wind or Bit Street That You Want to Walk), depending on which sign you refer to.  Just in front of Exit 6-1, it’s a small pathway behind a waterfall sculpture where water tumbles over staircase-like green glass slats.  Much better as an art installation than someplace you can actually take a stroll.

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Behind Exit 4 or just around from Exit 5 the other half of the plaza features a dancing fountain, where about ten kids were taking advantage of one of the last days that was warm enough for splashing, and behind that is a mural wall with one of those rather cheesy sets of painted angel wings for trick photography that seem to be popping up everywhere in Seoul these days.

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Both Exit 5 and 6-1 put you right in front of Bit Plaza, near where there was some kind of car promotion going on and people sifted through bins of discount jeans on the day I visited, but Exit 12 connects directly into the middle of the complex.

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Bit Plaza has a huge E-Mart and several floors of everything you’d expect at a big Seoul shopping complex: phone shops, cosmetics boutiques, salons, candy shops, shoe stores, Vietnamese noodle restaurants…  The fourth floor has a pretty wide ranging food court – bagels, sushi, hamburgers – and the fifth floor is home to both an indoor waterpark and the CGV with Korea’s largest Imax screen.

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On the fourth and fifth floors you also have access to outdoor plazas looking west, from which you can see N Seoul Tower and Doota in Dongdaemun popping up above the apartment complexes.

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A sign near the elevators advertised the Sky Plaza on the 15th, 16th, and 17th floors, but when we tried to go up the lift wouldn’t take us any higher than the 9th.  An attempt to sneak onto the service elevator was also unsuccessful, as the up button from the ninth floor did nothing.

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So what’s on the ninth floor if you get stuck there in your attempts to sneak upstairs?  That would be the Golf Dome, a four story (6th, 7th, 8th, 9th) driving range that’s also part of the complex.  If you haven’t been, hanging out in one of these indoor driving ranges for a few minutes can be a pretty Zen experience.  Almost no one talks, directing all of their focus to the small white orb set between their slightly more than shoulder width feet.  There are barely perceptible rushes as clubs split the air, and an almost regular and gentle tick…tick as clubs meet balls, like the dripping of a water clock.

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Connected to the main part of the Bit Plaza complex, near Exits 5 and 6-1, is the Enter 6 Fashion Square, a clothing mall with a rather odd Renaissance-y, medieval-y theme.  The merchandise is decidedly 21st Century – Nike, Converse, Basic House – but the décor is a mashup of Italian Renaissance, Arthurian and Victorian England, and just anything that looks old and European really.  A central atrium holds a red-lit fountain of four topless maidens, around which runs a wall with Renaissance-esque paintings, and a random bust placed next to the Starbucks sign.  There were also several people in costume: a girl in a dress that made her look like Little Bo Peep, a guy who was supposed to be a court jester but looked more like a circus clown, and a woman in a red gown with white ruffles who turned back and forth like a robot mime.  And, of course, the big screen above them played K-pop videos.

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Behind Bit Plaza, via Exit 6, is an area of small streets filled with restaurants, bars, convenience stores, DVD rooms, and lots of goshiwons (고시원) and goshitels (고시텔) (small rooms, about three square meters, that students often rent); in short, everything a college student could want.  Nearby is Hanyang University (한양대학교) and this little nook is a lively nightlife area, alive in the evenings with students blowing off steam.

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Walk straight back from the exit and from Bit Plaza and you’ll come to Majang-ro (마장로) where, near the intersection with Wangsimni-gil, there is a buzzing arcade filled with video games, Dance Dance Revolution, and a singing booth where you can record yourself onto CD.  There’s also a line of punching and soccer ball kicking games lined up outside if you need to take out your aggression on something.  Idiosyncratically, you’ll also find a small market tucked in the middle of the area.  No more than a dozen stalls, it’s an island of seniors in the sea of twenty-somethings around it.

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If all goes well and your score on the punching game or dexterity with the crane is sufficiently impressive, you may then wish to avail yourself of the strip of love motels near Exit 1.  Take the first right, on Wangsimni-ro-20-gil (왕십리로20길), and pick your pleasure.  Just don’t answer the phone if mom calls.

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Bonnie’s kitchen (바니스)

Exit 9

U-turn, south on Wangsimni-gil (왕십리길)

070-4135-0030

www.bonnieskitchen.co.kr

Seongdong Culture Hall (성동문화회관)

Exit 9

U-turn, south on Wangsimni-gil (왕십리길)

Bit Plaza (비트프라자)

Exits 4, 5, 6, 6-1, 12, 13

Enter 6 Fashion Square

Exits 5 and 6-1

Hanyang University nightlife area

Exit 6

Love Motels

Exit 1

Right on Wangsimni-ro-20-gil (왕십리로20길)

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