3.1Km 2024-04-18
12, Sowol-ro 2-gil, Jung-gu, Seoul
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3.1Km 2024-04-17
B1, 249, Dongho-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
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3.1Km 2024-04-23
The Shilla Hotel’s shopping arcade, 249, Dongho-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
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3.1Km 2024-04-18
1F, 249, Dongho-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
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3.1Km 2024-04-23
249, Dongho-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
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3.1Km 2024-04-18
249, Dongho-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
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3.2Km 2024-03-06
387, Toegye-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
+82-2-2230-6600
Chungmu Arts Center is a complex cultural facility with an optimal conditions for watching performances. It has a large theater, a medium theater (black), and a small theater (blue). It also boasts great galleries, studios, and a swimming pool, attracting numerous visitors. In addition, one can enjoy performances of various genres, including classical music, plays, musicals, and concerts. Located close to Dongdaemun, it has good accessibility.
3.2Km 2024-06-26
1F, 118, Dongsomun-ro, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul
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3.2Km 2024-03-06
91, Sowol-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul
82-2-3789-1016
The Ahn Junggeun Memorial Museum honors the memory of Ahn Junggeun (1879-1910), an independence activist and soldier who advocated for Korean independence and peace in Asia. He fought against the Japanese to defend the Korean Empire (1897-1910). He was executed in 1910 for assassinating Hirobumi Ito, the Japanese who led the invasion of Korea in 1909, in Harbin, China.
3.2Km 2025-04-11
11-7 Majang-ro 5-gil, Jung-gu, Seoul
Hwanghak-dong Flea Market was named after the way how merchants travel from one place to another all over the country, as if like fleas hopping around from one spot to another, to collect rare and valuable items. This market was once a haven of antiques and collectibles, but with the formation of old-fashioned art street in 1983 in Janganpyeong, many classic art shops had moved out, leaving only used item and general goods stores. Now, visitors can find stores selling antiques, used furniture, electronics, clocks, jewelry, musical instruments, camera, and machinery – pretty much anything one can name. Hwanghak-dong Flea Market is also referred to as Dokkaebbi Market, to describe how even the most rundown items become just like new, as if like the work of a dokkaebi (Korean folk goblin).