Welcome to Seoul, the City of the Future
The once poor South Korean city has bloomed into a cultural capital with high-profile architecture, top museums and an influential arts scene
- By Tom Downey
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
City of the Future
What if the people who erected the thousands of ugly but functional apartment buildings that dot Seoul, who laid down city streets sometimes eight lanes wide, who built this place, as Myounggu Kang told me, out of necessity and not for beauty, could start again and build an entire Korean city from scratch? What would it look like? Just seven miles from Seoul’s international airport, and adjacent to the city of Incheon, is Songdo, an entirely new city built on top of land reclaimed from tidal flats. It may provide an answer. No one lived in Songdo before—the land was covered by the sea. It wasn’t thrown together to accommodate a housing crisis. Located between China and Japan and a three-hour flight from eight of the world’s top urban centers, it was designed as a major business hub.
From central Seoul I take an express train to the airport, then a taxi across a very long causeway to Songdo. Before I arrive I can see the high-rises looming over the waterfront. Scott Summers, who works for Gale International, the U.S. company behind a large part of the Songdo project, takes me up to the 52nd floor of a residential building to look out on what his company has created.
As I gaze at the neat rows of high-rise buildings punctuated by small and large parks and bisected by a canal, I realize that this place is the opposite of Seoul. It has ample room for residents to stroll the streets, play in parks and cruise the tranquil canals. “We drew our inspiration from cities around the world,” Summers tells me. “Pocket parks from Savannah, an arts center modeled on what Sydney’s opera house has done for that city, a huge swath of parkland based on New York’s Central Park.” The global financial crisis has made the Songdo project much more challenging than when it was first conceived. As we return to ground level and drive through the streets, it’s hard to assess the project’s success because only a small number of residents and businesses have moved in.
Songdo is one of the most intensely planned places on earth. There is no history to contend with. There is only the future. I think about what Seoul residents have made of their city and wonder what Songdo will look like when those same human forces do their work here. If rapid and radical changes in Seoul are any indication, Songdo residents will make something distinctive, living—and entirely unanticipated—out of the raw materials this new city is offering them.
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Comments (6)
I immensely appreciated and loved this article about a somewhat "New Korea". By "New Korea" i mean that i feel Korea has been impressive on the level of China and Japan for a while. Yet they do not have the recognition simply because we are the new dogs in town. Korea has been on an economic rise since the 70's and more impressively the fact of how fast things have progressed. I was lucky enough to be able to see Korea both in a peripheral and semi-peripheral state. Also to see that it has achieved this difficult status. Samsung, Hyundai, LG, etc were once seen as a joke to becoming a staple and now 2012's biggest crowd bringer at the IMF. Some can even say a new and worthy rival for the once alone at the top, APPLE. This article was a reminder of what it is like visiting. Like you found a hidden gen and a trip was a lot more fun then you had initially expected. It made me nostalgic of when I used to only visit or what my friends who visit me can related too. I am sure Tom (the journalist for this article) will be back just like the people who visit me have.
Posted by darmie on November 16,2012 | 06:47 AM
"this capital has transformed itself from an impoverished city decimated by the Korean War" No, it was not "decimated," it was "devastated." Decimation was a technique used by sadistic Roman leaders to teach their troops a lesson, involving the killing of every tenth soldier. Seoul was pretty much leveled during the cruel Korean War, much worse than losing a tenth of the city, with the capital changing hands multiple times.
Posted by saucymugwump on November 12,2012 | 09:37 PM
Korea was conquered by the Mongol Yuan dynasty that was centered in China and ruled by Kubalai Khan. The Koreans. Were forced to send women to China and provide ships and sailors for Mongol invasion invasions of Japan.
Posted by Bryan on November 7,2012 | 11:05 PM
Seoul does sleep... on Mondays! Nothing is ever open on Monday! lol.
Posted by Daniel on October 31,2012 | 02:25 AM
China never colonized Korea. Please do your research. Thank you.
Posted by I expect more from the Smithsonian on October 25,2012 | 02:10 PM
Do you know ? The only place in the world to get close to wild western lowland gorillas is deep in a Central African Republic forest.
Posted by Robert on October 25,2012 | 08:36 AM