Posts Tagged ‘Songpa-gu’

Jamsil Station (잠실역) Line 2 – Station #216, Line 8 – Station #814

January 8, 2012

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Hidden among the soaring glass and steel towers of southeastern Seoul is a wormhole, a portal to a land that physically exists within the Songpa-gu dimensions of time and space but which could seemingly secede and declare a sovereign one block corporation-state at will.  Behold, ladies and gentlemen, the People’s Republic of Lotte.

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You don’t even need to exit the station to cross its event horizon, so seamless is the boundary between its world and ours.  And once inside you could conceivably never have to leave.  You could live at the Lotte Hotel World; buy provisions at Lotte Mart; purchase clothing and dry goods at the Lotte Department Store; acquire alcohol, tobacco, and Chanel No. 5 at the Lotte World Duty Free Shops; procure entertainment at LotteCinema or Lotte World Adventure; take in a show at the Charlotte Theater; and eat and drink at Lotteria.  Presumably the only thing the Republic is unprepared for is your departure, as there is no Lotte Funeral Home.

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Lotty and Lorry the raccoons are benevolent overlords, though, and with the chill of a Korean winter beginning to hit with full force you may find yourself embracing their gay regime, particularly since it’s entirely indoors.

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The Lotte World complex’s main attraction, Lotte World Adventure, is in fact the world’s largest indoor theme park at 82,650 square meters, and you can get to it (and everything else in the Republic) by heading for (though not out of) Exit 4.  You’ll first pass by a plaza with a replica of Rome’s Trevi Fountain.  The one here has improved on the original by adding multicolored lights in the basin!  Of course there’s a Lotteria in the plaza as well, and on the opposite side is an entrance to the department store.  From there you’ll walk down a long hallway flanked with more stores, and if the number of people under one meter is increasing you’ll know you’re headed in the right direction.

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Standing in line for tickets, confetti-and-sugar amusement park songs blasted out of overhead speakers and I asked my intrepid (over one meter) companion if they would be playing the entire time we were inside as well.  She said yes and I began to have second thoughts.  At this point, though, there were people behind us in line.  Like in countless action movies the door behind us had closed, and there was only one option left.  Forward.

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Tickets in hand, we stepped onto an escalator, the music only growing louder as we ascended until we arrived at the top, smack in the midst of one of the park’s twice-daily parades.  It was October so the song was beseeching us to join the ‘Halloween party tonight,’ over and over again, as the parade revolved in an oval around the center of the park.  The employees were dressed as mummies or vampires or just in what I guess you’d call Victorian gothic.  Oddly, almost all of the employees in the parade were white people.  Granted, I’ve never seen a Korean vampire, but it seems to me the situation is just begging for an undead class-action discrimination lawsuit.  There were some sexy Ghostbusters too (some of which were Korean), and all I could think was ‘Thank God Dan and Bill didn’t wear outfits like that.’

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When the parade stopped and I had a chance to look around I found myself rather impressed.  The park is a notable example of the utilization of space; it may be the world’s largest indoor theme park, but it’s still indoors, which means that options are limited.  Lotte World overcomes most of these limitations by stacking rides and other attractions on multiple floors, but still having the majority of them visible from the main floor.  A number of rides also have their entrances on the main floor, but their structures hidden behind the outer wall.  This takes away the ‘Oooh, I want to ride on that’ factor, but on the other hand it preserves a bit of the mystery of what you’re getting yourself into.  Other rides make use of the space in the air – there’s a monorail that loops through the park, and gondolas designed to look like hot air balloons pass around above, hanging from a track in the ceiling – and on the ground whatever nook isn’t taken up by rides or arcades or restaurants is occupied by a game stand or ice cream stall.  All of this sits under a giant glass dome that lets in lots of natural light, which adds a feeling of openness.

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There are a couple downsides to all this, though.  One is that all the rides inside feel a bit miniaturized: tiny flume ride, tiny teacups.  If you’re only a meter tall, though, that’s maybe not the worst thing.  The other is that even more than most theme parks, Lotte World can drub you with sensory overload and a feeling of compression.  An area with a Wild West theme sits flush against some European-y buildings with wooden flower boxes, which are both just below a wall of Egyptian statues and hieroglyphics.

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Now, with space at such a premium, you wouldn’t expect there to be a giant hole in the floor.  But there is.  Smack in the middle of the park is a giant hole that looks down on the ice skating rink two stories below.  What the hole actually does, though, is give the park some breathing room and make it feel more open.  The empty space gives the light a chance to spread out and provides some structure for what might otherwise just be a crush of buildings and rides and vendors.  It also provides a convenient route for couples on dates to stroll.

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At one of the oval’s ends is the Garden Stage where occasional performances are held.  I happened to catch a mini-concert by the Charlotte Band, basically an all-girls marching band.  Dressed in red and white uniforms with gold trim and white boots they went through Girls’ Generation and 4-Minute numbers, as well as the Ppororo theme song.  Let me tell you, you have not truly heard ‘Hoot’ unless you’ve heard it the way it was meant to be played: on a sousaphone.

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Lotte World Adventure, isn’t all empty calories, though.  There’s also a small nature center where a variety of plants grow and kids have the chance to hold frogs as a guide explains their mysterious amphibian ways.  There’s also a collection of aquariums containing several species of fish, pools of crabs, and glass boxes holding crickets, grasshoppers, and stag beetles.  Near the gift shop is a large bowl of dirt where kids can sift through and look for Japanese rhinoceros beetle larvae (장수풍댕이).  One boy that was busily digging through was collecting his findings in a quickly growing pile.

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Not all of the amusement park is inside, however.  A walkway connects the indoor portion of the park to Magic Island, set in the middle of the western part of Seokchon Lake.  Much of Lotte World feels like it borrowed just a biiiiit too heavily from Disney World: the name; the Magic Kingdom Island designation; the fuzzy, big-eyed, white-gloved, tuxedo-wearing mascot, and the centerpiece of the Island, the Magic Castle, is a dead-ringer for Sleeping Beauty’s castle with a more modest construction budget.  (Cinderella’s place, of course, being a knock-off too, of Mad King Ludwig’s Neuschwanstein.)  The castle is, according to a sign on its front, ‘considered a masterpiece of gothic architecture of 16th Century Germany.’  Given that it was built neither in the 16th Century nor in Germany, this seems dubious.  More believable is the claim that it ‘will give you the most memorable experience you’ve never had!’  You may now chew on that one for a while.

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The outdoor section of Lotte World has more serious rides than the indoor section, and correspondingly the demographic skews a bit older.  Inside are lots of kids and parents; outside you’ll see more teens and adults, many of them couples on dates.  A word on the Lotte World dress code: couple style here is, while not quite de rigueur, at the very least heartily embraced.  Matching t-shirts or hats are commonplace.  I even saw one couple that literally had the exact same outfit on: shoes, pants, hoodies, bags, everything.  The other dominant Lotte World trend is putting ridiculous things on your head.  Most often this takes the form of oversized bows, but can also be bunny ears or seasonal decorations bobbing on the end of springy coils.

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The entire Lotte World setup, like any good amusement park, is a temple to screaming, eating, game playing, and being spendthrift.  I had been highly skeptical of the whole affair and the only reason I went was for research (or at least that’s what I told myself).  Despite having a tendency to be a bit of a crank, however, I actually found myself having a pretty good time at the place.  A lot of this can probably be attributed to the company I had, the beautiful weather, and the limited time I spent there, but all in all Lotte World ain’t bad.

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Of course, the risk of amusement park-induced rage is always present, particularly if you visit in the winter and the outdoor section is closed.  Fortunately a couple of pressure valves are built into the system.  Tucked away in a corner of Lotte World’s second floor is a smoking room.  Give the kiddies a fistful of 500 won coins, tell them to play nice, and go light up.

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Those unfiltereds not doing the trick?  Leave the park and head downstairs toward the skating rink.  Just off the ice is the entrance to the Lotte World Shooting Range (롯데월드 권충실탄사격장), marked by the posters of handguns plastered around the doorway.

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Stepping into the range’s reception area, a half-flight of stairs below the rink, is a singularly weird experience.  The walls are covered with pictures of firearms, gun-wielding heroes and villains from TV and movies, and also a few signed pictures of Korean celebrities who’ve come in to shoot off a few rounds, including Tablo from Epik High and his wife 강혜정, who starred in Oldboy.  Assault weapons are bolted to the walls and copies of gun magazines take up table space.  Pretty run of the mill stuff if you were in your Texan uncle’s den, but this is Korea, where seeing a firearm outside of the military is about as common as sighting a tiger in the wild.

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Despite being American I come from a non-hunting, non 2nd Amendment-worshipping family and had only fired a gun twice.  The opportunity to squeeze off a few in Korea was one I couldn’t pass up, though.  Want to do it too?  Here’s how: Walk up to the counter, give the attendant your ID card and 20,000 won, point to the gun you want to shoot.  That’s it.  Almost as easy as getting a semi-automatic back in the States.  I chose a Glock 9mm ‘cause I’m street that way.

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When my turn was up I was ushered into the shooting range where one employee strapped a bulletproof vest on me and pointed me to a second employee who was waiting by my lane.  That guy pointed out how to hold the gun, where to aim, and where to pull the trigger.  Then he gave me a pair of noise-muffling headphones to put on, loaded a clip, and let me fire away.  Ten shots later my clip was empty and the target zipped back to the booth where the attendant unclipped it and showed me how I’d done: one bullseye, eight other holes scattered across the target, and one way down in the corner that had missed completely.  The target was only about ten meters away.  I’m not a very good shot.

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If you’re sweet (and it helps to be female) one of the attendants will take your photo like this.

And that was it.  So how did I feel afterwards?  Powerful?  Sated?  De-stressed?  Like I’d channeled my inner Slim Charles?  Well…mostly I felt that it’s a damn fast way to blow through 20,000 won with nothing put a paper full of holes to show for it.

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Back outside, the skaters on the ice rink glided on, completely unaware of the pulpy carnage I’d just unleashed.  The Lotte World Ice Rink is one of the most popular places for skating in Seoul, and if you’ve never skated before it’s a perfectly fine place to try it out; there are always plenty of beginners slowly shuffling around clinging to the outer rail.  If you’re as at home on blades as you are in sneakers that’s good too – as a public rink in a popular entertainment mecca, the sheet here is always a mix of all different levels.  The inner section of the rink is sometimes used for figure skating practice, and I watched a handful of aspiring Kim Yu-Nas landing some pretty impressive jumps as the crowd circled around them.

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As nurturing and providing as the People’s Republic of Lotte is, you may find yourself wishing to defect back to the real world at some point.  And after so much stimulation, you may be looking for something a bit less manic.  Head out Exit 3 and walk straight, past the giant neon raccoon, to Seokchon Lake (석촌호수).  (If you turn right at the raccoon it’ll lead to you the Charlotte Theater (Not Charlotte as in the South-Atlantic financial capital; Charlotte as in 샤롯데, as in Char-Lotte, as in ‘Don’t you forget who owns this.’) where ‘Cats’ is currently playing.)

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The lake is split into two parts by Songpa-daero (송파대로) and is especially popular for the walking track that runs around its circumference.  In the afternoons and evenings it’ll be full of mostly middle-age and older Seoulites taking some exercise, and after the sun goes down young couples start to join the procession.  This all happens in a very orderly clockwise direction, which makes you wonder why the city’s whole ‘Walk on the Right’ campaign is so roundly ignored while the one-way traffic here is so strictly observed.

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The two halves of the lakes have significantly different characteristics.  Though both are pretty, with lots of trees, the east half is markedly more serene.  You may even spot a heron standing stoically near its banks.  This contrast is due to the fact that Lotte World’s Magic Island sits in the middle of the western half, so your romantic evening stroll will be regularly pierced by the screams of roller coaster riders and the wheezing hydraulics of the Bungee Drop.  What it takes away in calm it makes up for in entertainment value, though.

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More entertainment is occasionally provided just off the lake’s northwest corner at the Seoul Norimadang (서울놀이마당).  This open-air theater hosts dance, music, drama, and martial arts exhibitions, mostly on weekends and mostly of the traditional variety, though I have seen b-boying performances held there as well.

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The west side of the lake has one more item of note – right near its entrance is Samjeondobi (삼전도비), a pair of large stone turtles – one bearing a stele, the other with its stele missing – that are designated Historic Site No. 101.  The monument was erected at the request of Taizong of the Qing Dynasty to commemorate his victory in the Second Manchu Invasion of 1636.

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Across Songpa-daero’s ten lanes from Lotte World is a big hole in the ground where yet another piece of the Lotte empire is set to rise, as the construction of the Lotte World Tower is underway.  Walking past I paused to watch as a handful of giant cranes moved their loads about and sparks showered from a welder’s platform.  It was bound to be one more in the neighborhood’s collection of big shiny glass and steel towers that dominate the area.  Banks, convenience stores, and chain coffee shops occupy their ground floors while up above people fill their apartments or toil in their offices.  A block or so north the Number 2 train rumbles by on an elevated track not that far overhead, breaking up the monotony a bit.  Another point of interest tucked between Lotte World and the neighborhood’s modern towers is the series of sculptures of athletes performing various Olympic sports that dot the median on Olympic-ro (올림픽로), recalling when Seoul hosted the 1988 Summer Games.

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If Seokchon Lake isn’t enough of an escape, you can head out Exit 6 and hoof it a kilometer to Hangang Park (한강공원).  Jamsil-daero eventually brings you to the Jamsil Bridge (잠실대교), which you’ll want to go partway up before descending down a circular ramp to the park.  If it’s near sundown and you can tolerate the cold and the noise of the passing traffic, you may want to pause in this unlikely spot to take in what can be a pretty spectacular sunset, as the changing deep blues and pinks silhouette the 63 Building, N Seoul Tower, and the mountain ridges to the north and west.

In the park down below some evening joggers and bikers passed by as I listed to the rush of water coming from a spot below the bridge where the river tumbles about a half-meter from one level to another.  The park is much sparser here than in many other places, the only real amenities being a few picnic tables, making it a good area to have a catch come spring.

Stroll west a short ways, however, and two attraction spring up side-by-side.  The first is the Nature Learning Center (자연학습장), an area of flower gardens, fruit trees, and other plants designed for the educational benefit of school kids.  Next to that is what they’ll probably find more interesting: a swimming pool.  That, however, they’ll have to wait for.

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Lotte World, Lotte World Adventure, and Magic Island

Towards Exit  4

Lotte World Adventure Hours

Monday – Thursday: 9:30 – 22:00; Friday – Sunday: 9:30 – 23:00

Ticket information available on at website

www.lotteworld.com

02) 411-2000

Lotte World Shooting Range (롯데월드 권충실탄사격장)

Hours

Weekdays: 9 – 21:00, Weekends and Holidays: 9 – 22:00

Fee: 20,000 won for 10 bullets

cafe.naver.com/lwsr

02) 414- 4013

Lotte World Ice Rink

Hours

Weekdays: 10 – 21:30, Weekends and Holidays: 10 – 21:30

Entrance Fee

12 and Under: 7,500 won, 13 and up: 8,500; Skate rental: 4,500

Seokchon Lake (석촌호수) and Samjeondobi (삼전도비)

Eastern Half: Exit 2, Western Half and Samjeondobi: Exit 3

South on Songpa-daero (송파대로)

Seoul Norimadang (서울놀이마당)

Exit 3

South on Songpa-daero (송파대로), right on Jamsil-ro (잠실로)

Hangang Park (한강공원)

Exit 6

North on Songpa-daero (송파대로) to Jamsil Bridge (잠실대교)

Parts of this post first appeared in the December 2011 issue of SEOUL magazine.

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National Police Hospital Station (경찰병원역) Line 3 – Station #351

July 31, 2011

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One of the newest stations in the Seoul metro system, National Police Hospital Station was built right next to, you guessed it, the National Police Hospital (국립경찰병원), a hulking off-white brick building looking out over the intersection near Exit 1. A sign near its driveway says ‘ONE-STOP 지원센터 (support center)’ which makes it sound more like an electronics repair shop than a hospital, but whatever.

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Some government agencies (the Korean Radio Promotion Agency, the Korean Internet Development Agency) occupy places in the office building across Jangjidong-gil (장지동길), but otherwise the area across the street and behind the hospital is a very typical middle-class neighborhood – lots of office-tels with chain stores, nail shops, and flower boutiques lining the first floors.

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On the same side of Jungdae-ro (중대로), but out Exit 2, you’ll find Garak Park (가락공원) on a tall hill. A rubber walking path winds through some trees, circling around three badminton courts nestled in a basin below. You’ll see the mandatory exercise machines, and you might even come across, as I did, a dozen ajeosshis day-drinking and playing some type of game while a green pyramid of soju and makkeoli bottles pile up beneath a nearby sapling.

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You’ll find another neighborhood park, the smaller Geonneomal Park (건너말공원), if you take the first left (Jangjidong-gil) out of Exit 4 and then, just after the big glassy Maria Fertility Hospital, hang a right on Song-i-ro-26-gil (송이로26길).

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If you see the restaurant with the giant crab and the rusty hull of a ship above the entrance you’ll know you’re on the right track.

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The park is nothing terribly special but it does have a pleasant, though modest, rose garden of red, pink, and yellow blossoms. You’ll also find a dirt badminton and basketball court and some colorful playground equipment in the northeast corner where a few kids were getting in a screechy argument when I happened by.

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If you skip the park and continue southeast on Jangjidong-gil you’ll eventually come to the big intersection with Dongnam-ro (동남로). Turn right here and you’re on Munjeong Rodeo Street (문정로데오길), another one of the city’s so-called Rodeo Streets.

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Of course, it’s lined with clothing stores and outlets: Basic House, Fila, Calvin Klein, Zara, Nike, blah, blah, blah.

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Just before leaving I went to take a look at the area outside of Exit 3, not expecting much since it’s mostly apartment buildings, but almost immediately outside the exit was a sign advertising one of my favorite and most missed things in the world: jerk chicken, something I have never, ever seen in Seoul. Indeed the name of the restaurant, tucked on an anonymous upper floor of an anonymous office building, was simply Jerk Chicken (저크치킨). I didn’t go in. Why on earth, if my love for jerk chicken is as true as I claim it is, did I not go in? Although the advertisement said ‘Caribbean Style Jerk Chicken,’ the picture below it was just of a plate of generic fried chicken. Not even a hint of jerk spice. Had I been feeling braver, I might have ventured in. But as it stood on that day, I’ve just had my heart broken too many times here by foods that promise authenticity and then go and do something like put corn where the good Lord never intended corn to go. Better, I thought, to live with a beautiful illusion than to risk heartbreak. Am I wrong? Readers, has anyone eaten there and found it’s the real thing?

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National Police Hospital (국립경찰병원)

Exit 1

Garak Park (가락공원)

Exit 2

Geonneomal Park (건너말공원)

Exit 4

Left on Jangjidong-gil (장지동길), right on Song-i-ro-26-gil (송이로26길)

Munjeong Rodeo Street (문정로데오길)

Exit 4

Left on Jangjidong-gil (장지동길), right on Dongnam-ro (동남로)

Jerk Chicken (저크치킨)

Exit 3

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Gaerong Station (개롱역) Line 5 – Station #P553

July 24, 2011

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Gaerong Station sits at the southeast corner of the large Ogeum Park (오금공원) that we visited when we went to, er, Ogeum Station, so you can get the skinny on the park at that post. The one difference that I’ll point out is that the part of the park across the street from Exit 1 also sits next to a big apartment complex, so this end has a bit more rest areas to stop and settle, compared to the heavily treed west half.

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Like the neighborhoods around other stations we’ve visited on this side of town, there’s an emphasis on keeping things green, and most streets are lined with trees. The best place to enjoy that around Gaerong is at the Seongnae Stream (성내천), which you’ll also find by going out Exit 1. To get there just keep walking straight for a couple blocks.

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We’ve been surprised at how often urban streams have popped up in the course of our wanderings – there are a lot more in Seoul than you’d expect – and in my opinion the Seongnae, which runs from the edge of the city near Cheonma Mountain (천마산) through Olympic Park to the Hangang, is perhaps the nicest. Its brown water meanders past banks of reeds and pebbles, and was moving quickly due to the recent rains when I visited. Stepping stones and wooden bridges cross the stream, and a drooping willow sits on an islet in the middle. The standard rubber walking and biking path runs alongside, but there’s also a series of sculpted lily pad pools. Tiny wildflowers dot the banks and quiet opera is piped through the speakers that line the walking path. Just west of where you arrive coming from the station is a pair of wooden stages and fountain pools.

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In the other direction, through a shaded wooden canopy over the path, is a long series of splash pools that were filled with hundreds of kids on a recent hot and humid Saturday. Although the water was maybe a half-meter deep, a good percentage of the kids were wearing flotation devices. As their families watched from tents set up on rubber mats nearby the little guys played with squirt guns and beach balls. Fair warning: the adorability quotient here is through the roof. So is the indiscriminate water splashing, so watch your step.

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Just past the splash pools to the east is what the station map labeled the Best View Point (우수조망며소 (성내4)), which is a semi-circular platform big enough for about two people on the bridge above the stream. The view west down the stream is all fine and good, but you’re much better off buying some cotton candy from one of the many nearby vendors and heading down to the stream below. If your stomach needs something more substantial there’s a row of casual restaurants – jokbal, seolleongtang, beer and chicken – on the street parallel to the stream’s south bank.

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My only guess as to why they call that little semi-circle the Best View Point is that it’s because, standing there, you have your back to the eyesore that is the hulking Seoul Ring Expressway (서울외곽순환고속도로), its hulking concrete trunks holding up a highway canopy.

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If you walk straight out of Exit 3 down Ogeum-ro (오금로) at the corner of Ogeum-ro-48-gil (오금로48길) you’ll see a tall black and gray column with gold lettering announcing Gaerong Gol Admiral Street (개롱골 장군거리). I strolled down 48-gil, which was mostly restaurants, and couldn’t find any information on what Admiral Street is or why it’s there. Readers?

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For another park, Gaerong Neighborhood Park (개롱근림공원), head south down Dongnam-gil (동남길) from Exit 4. Across from the Ssangyong Plaza building the park’s up a small hill from the street. Because of its hilly setting, the park is terraced: sloping paths connect small areas of exercise equipment with playgrounds and pavilions, one of which was occupied by a circle of a dozen old ajummas enjoying an afternoon chat. The setup gives the park an intimate feel; you can be in one area and feel relatively secluded. The largest area is located in the center of the park, where there’s one of those soccer-volleyball courts. A four-on-four game between some middle-aged men was going on when I visited, and nearby some noisy kids kicked a soccer ball and a pair of women walked a dachshund.

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Ogeum Park (오금공원)

Exit 1

Seongnae Stream (성내천) and Best View Point (우수조망며소 (성내4))

Exit 1

Walk north for two blocks

Gaerong Gol Admiral Street (개롱골 장군거리)

Exit 3

East on Ogeum-ro (오금로)

Gaerong Neighborhood Park (개롱근림공원)

Exit 4

South on Dongnam-gil (동남길)

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Ogeum Station (오금역) Line 3 – Station #352, Line 5 – Station #P552

July 17, 2011

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Having made the trek allllll the way across Seoul to go to Bangi Station, I wasn’t about to make the two-hour round-trip commute without getting my money’s worth, so a visit to next door Ogeum Station was in order.  And like Bangi, the most salient feature of the Ogeum neighborhood is the amount of greenery there is.

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Several small parks dot the vicinity, but the one that stands out is the very large Ogeum Park (오금공원) immediately outside of Exit 2.  Some wooden steps just outside the entrance lead up to a dirt path that winds through the park.  This isn’t a park in the sense of a place where you can go picnic on the grass, find barbecue facilities, and play catch; it’s more of an urban woods, really.  There are occasional small clearings for benches, but the bulk of the park is pretty heavily forested.  I even came across a middle-aged woman who’d left her umbrella behind to climb off the path and scrounge through the undergrowth for some type of leaf or something.

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After a few minutes I came to a clearing where jok-gu (족구) (the game that looks like foot volleyball) courts, a pavilion, and some exercise equipment had been set up, and behind those, the façade covered in a green tarp and almost blending into the woods, some badminton courts.  Past that was one of those tortuous foot massaging walking paths, this one going around some strange conical piles of rocks about a meter and a half high.

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Just south of there I spotted a rather untidy burial mound flanked by two stone pillars and two stone guardians, in front of which were two smaller and untidier mounds, again with two pillars and guardians in addition to a weatherworn stone plaque with some Chinese script on it.  A sign in front identified the site as the Family Burial Grounds of the Munhwa Ryu Clan (문화류씨 묘역), Seoul Tangible Cultural Property No. 79.  The clan, hailing from Hwanghae province in what is now North Korea, was an important aristocratic house during the Goryeo and Joseon dynasties.

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Among those buried here is Ryu Hui-rim, who had a particularly colorful history.  According to the sign posted in front of the graves, as a young man he was a student of Confucianism and wrote an appeal to the king on behalf of a thousand fellow students that two schools of Buddhism – Seonjong, the Contemplative School, and Gyojong, the Textual School – be abolished.  (No information on whether this was successful or not.)  He would later go on to hold a number of government posts, and in 1581 was sent to China as an envoy to the Ming Dynasty, but in a 16th Century epic fail he was dismissed because the gifts he brought the court were deemed insufficient.  He made up for that in 1592, however, by serving King Seonjo (선조) during the Japanese invasion, and after his death in 1604 he was posthumously made a Meritorious Retainer and given the title Munyanggeun, which is nice work if you can get it, I guess.

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If you want to check out the burial grounds the easiest way to get there would be to go out Exit 2, u-turn, and then turn left on Ogeum-ro (오금로), walking until you reach the park’s main entrance.  Go in and take the path between the restrooms and basketball courts, and follow it around to your left.

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The area east of the main entrance isn’t quite as thickly wooded as it is to the west, and you’ll find tennis courts and a wide walking circuit there, but the trees are still plentiful enough to create a very shady canopy and this, along with the park’s size – it covers several blocks and stretches all the way to Gaerong Station (개롱역) – makes it a good oasis from the summer heat.

The other main feature of the neighborhood can be found across Ogeum-ro by going out Exit 3 and turning right on Ogeum-ro-38-ga-gil (오금로38가길).  This will bring you to the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency 2nd Task Force (서울지방경찰청 제2기동대), where rows of police buses sat parked in the office lot, and, just beyond it, the Seong-dong Jail (성동구치소).

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The prison complex, which takes up an entire block, is ringed by a wall the color of cigarette stains and topped with barbed wire.  Walking southeast there was no way to see in, but I could hear a tennis ball being hit back and forth and could see the tall green netting of a driving range at one end, so it couldn’t have been all bad, at least for the guards.  Finally, at the east corner there was an open drive and I got a peek inside at what was a decidedly low-security part of the facility since it consisted of a garden and some rusty playground equipment.

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Of course, right next to the jail you’ll find not one, but two elementary schools, though if you’re looking for the jail itself on one of the various stations’ Digital View kiosks you’ll have a much harder time: the Daum street map replaces the jail with an anonymous group of trees.

 

Ogeum Park (오금공원) and Family Burial Grounds of the Munhwa Ryu Clan (문화류씨 묘역)

Exit 2

 

Seong-dong Jail (성동구치소)

Exit 3

Southeast on Ogeum-ro (오금로), Right on Ogeum-ro-38-ga-gil (오금로38가길)

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Bangi Station (방이역) Line 5 – Station #P551

July 10, 2011

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What’s most striking about the area around Bangi Station is how green it is, at least by Seoul standards.  Nearly every street in the neighborhood is tree-lined, numerous walls are covered with ivy, and despite the presence of some very large roads there’s far less of the concrete jungle feeling you get in other parts of town.  Lack of green space in Seoul is an oft-bemoaned fact, though I suspect it’s harder to establish – and balance with the existing infrastructure, economy, and local demands – than we often presume, particularly in a place like this where available land is scarce.  In any case, it’s obvious that the city or the Songpa-gu council or whoever it is that makes these decisions has put a lot of thought into ways they could make the Bangi neighborhood greener and more livable.

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You’ll notice this right away if you step out Exit 2 or 3, where something on the area map called The Best View Point (우수조망명소 (내부순화로실개천)) is located.  It’s not a view point at all; instead it’s a strip about ten meters wide between the sidewalk and the adjacent apartment blocks that runs along Nambusunhwa-ro (남부순화로) all the way from the station to Ogeum-ro (오금로).  In that strip is an artificial rock-lined brooklet, no more than a foot wide, tucked at the bottom of a small embankment packed with shrubs, groundcover, a few flowers (blue, orange, lavender), long grasses, and small trees, behind which are two rows of full-size trees.

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Behind the rows of trees are shaded walking paths if you prefer to walk without having to look at all the traffic, though you’ll still certainly hear it.  (PSA for the ladies: If you’re wearing heels, use the path on the east side, out Exit 2.  It’s paved, while the west side path, out Exit 3, is not and can get fairly muddy, especially this time of year.)  The View Point isn’t particularly big, but it’s a terrific example of making good use of the space you have and is, to be honest, quite lovely.  Stone blocks dot the sidewalk if you feel like stopping to stare.

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Mr. Lee, a lovely volunteer who will walk through the park with you. (At least he did with Liz when she was there.) He is equally informative and charming, especially when he wishes he was younger to ask for your hand in marriage.

If you take the path from Exit 3 all the way to Ogeum-ro and then swing a right, a short walk will take you to the Bangi-dong Ancient Baekje-era Tombs (방이동백제고분군), Historic Site No. 270.  According to the sign at the entrance, these eight tombs were discovered in 1975 when the area was being developed; eight years later the tombs were reconstructed and the area turned into a park.  The tombs are in the form of tumuli, familiar to anyone who’s visited Gyeongju (though on a much smaller scale), and each consists of a square or rectangular chamber and corridor constructed on top of a stone base.  The interiors of some had vaulted ceilings and coffin platforms.  Most of the tombs had been robbed long before their discovery, but some mounted blue-gray stoneware dishes and jars were recovered.  This stoneware was thought to date to the Baekje period (18 BCE-660), hence the name, though it is now believed that the tombs themselves aren’t quite so old and date to the Unified Silla period (668-935).

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Through the entrance is a grassy lawn dotted with trees that separates the two groups of tombs.  To your left, four green domes sit on a hill in the northwest corner.  You can peer into the first through some metal bars, though there’s not a whole lot to see – a low stone passageway to a slightly larger area with stones laid on the ground making a flattish bed.  The grass on the other three tombs is neatly trimmed, but number one is a bit wilder and has a blue tarp weighed down with rocks and piles of dirt running over its top like a reverse Mohawk.  A roped path runs around and between the tombs, and at the top of the hill are some benches where you can see the forested mountains to the southeast.  Four more tombs sit on the southeast side of the park.  While the casual visitor might come to see a bit of Korean history, it seems that the main purpose the park serves is to provide a place for middle-aged and elderly women to get their daily walk in.

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From the tombs I walked northeast through the backstreets off Exits 3 and 4 through a leafy, peaceful neighborhood with a number of boutiques, cafes, and restaurants, Italian food being especially popular.

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Continuing in that direction, or going straight out of Exit 4, will bring you to the southeast corner of Olympic Park (올림픽공원) and the park’s Rose Plaza (장미광장), which sits in front of the big white bubble that is the Tennis Stadium (올림픽테니스장).

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The flowers were a bit battered from the previous day’s heavy rain, but a number of families and couples were still out admiring, helped by the useful boards listing the names and pictures of the different flowers at a couple points around the perimeter.  There are of course roses of every hue, as well as different types of flowers, but the most eye-catching thing in the plaza is ‘A Virtual Sphere’ (가상의 구), a huge orb of red and blue hanging tubes that looks like the Korean taegeuk without the curves.

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Just west of the Rose Plaza and opposite the Olympic Convention Center (올림픽컨벤션센터) is the Wildflower Hill (들꽃마루).  A dirt path runs around a small field of red wildflowers and grasses, and if you follow it to the top of the hill, where there’s a small pavilion, you can then stroll around the backside, where the flowers are more varied, here red, blue, pink, and lavender.

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It’s quieter, more secluded, and altogether prettier than the plaza is, and with a thick screen of trees between it and the adjacent road you can almost, almost, trick yourself into thinking that you’re in a country meadow.  If you’re looking to surprise your significant other with a special couple’s photo-op, you could hardly do better.  My PSA #2 for the day.  Lovers, you’re welcome.

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The Best View Point (우수조망명소 (내부순화로실개천))

Exit 2 or 3

Bangi-dong Ancient Baekje-era Tombs (방이동백제고분군)

Exit 3

South on Nambusunhwa-ro (남부순화로), west on Ogeum-ro (오금로)

Olympic Park (올림픽공원), Rose Plaza (장미광장), and Wildflower Hill (들꽃마루)

Exit 4

North on Nambusunhwa-ro

Special thanks to 이재만 for inviting us to Bangi Station and giving us some tips on what to see and do.

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