Author Archives: matt

Seoul Week: Nambu Bus Terminal Station

We’re celebrating Seoul Week on ExploreMetro! We’ve teamed up with Seoul Sub→urban to bring you stories and pictures from around Seoul. Every day this week we’ll bring you one of their profiles of a Seoul Subway station, today it’s Nambu Bus Terminal (남부터미널역) .

Don’t forget you can download Explore Seoul for iPhone for just $0.99 this week!

Nambu Bus Terminal (남부터미널역)

Line 3 – Station #341

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Originally called the Cargo Truck Terminal, Nambu Bus Terminal in Seocho-gu will be well familiar with anyone who’s used the metro to get to the Seoul Arts Center (예술의전당) complex at the foot ofUmyeon Mountain (우면산).  And we’ll get to that shortly (or, rather, Liz will) but first, a brief tour of the neighborhood.

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Because it seemed to offer the least possibility in terms of things of interest we started the afternoon going east down Hyoryeong-ro (효령로) from Exit 3.  This turned out to be a fairly accurate presupposition, not just for Hyoryeong-ro east of Nambu Terminal Station, but for the majority of the surrounding neighborhood as well, which displayed quite plainly the bluntness of the south side’s development.  Both Hyoryreong-ro and Umyeon-ro (우면로), running north-south, were lined with 10 to 20 story office and apartment towers, about which even their residents would be hard-pressed to say something.  We strolled through the back streets north and south of Hyoryreong-ro for a bit, and although there looked to be some nice brick homes just north of the avenue, the neighborhood felt perfectly perfunctory.

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The best evaluation came when, not five minutes after we’d stepped into the actual Bus Terminal, Liz walked up to me and said, ‘This place is already more interesting than the entire neighborhood.’

Read the full post on Seoul Sub→urban >>

Seoul Week: Yeouinaru Station

We’re celebrating Seoul Week on ExploreMetro! We’ve teamed up with Seoul Sub→urban to bring you stories and pictures from around Seoul. Every day this week we’ll bring you one of their profiles of a Seoul Subway station, today it’s Yeouinaru (여의나루역) .

Don’t forget you can download Explore Seoul for iPhone for just $0.99 this week!

Yeouinaru (여의나루역)

Line 5 – Station #527

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Because the western side of the number 5 line crosses the Han River by a deep tunnel and not a bridge, Yeouinaru Station, at 27.5 meters below sea level, is the lowest subway station in Korea.  Liz and I visited with our friend Casey this past Saturday, and the area was absolutely buzzing with people out to see Yeouido’s cherry blossom festival.  Families and couples crowded the station, and a long line stretched out the door of the women’s bathroom, mirrored by a bored-looking queue of waiting husbands and boyfriends.

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Outside, enterprising ajummas and ajeosshis were set up all around the station hawking beondaeggi, corndogs, and tteok to the seasonal tourists.  One grandmother hawked kimbap with a rolling pitch that had the cadence and panache of a ballpark hot dog vendor.

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All along Yeouisa-ro (여의사로) the trees were in full bloom, a soft emergence of pink and white.

Read the full post on Seoul Sub→urban >>

Seoul Week: Dapsimni Station

We’re celebrating Seoul Week on ExploreMetro! We’ve teamed up with Seoul Sub→urban to bring you stories and pictures from around Seoul. Every day this week we’ll bring you one of their profiles of a Seoul Subway station, today it’s Dapsimni (답십리역) .

Don’t forget you can download Explore Seoul for iPhone for just $0.99 this week!

Dapsimni (답십리역)

Line 5 – Station #542

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Tucked between Cheonhodae-ro (천호대로) and Cheonggyecheon (청계천) on the southwest side of Dapsimni Station is the little neighborhood of Yongdapdong (용답동).  Before getting to the moderately well-known antique markets on the opposite side of the avenue, Liz and I decided to pop in to this area for a look-see.  It was pleasantly busy on a Saturday afternoon, people out and about doing weekend neighborhood things: buying groceries, doing a bit of shopping, or just strolling about.

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Down one street outside Exit 5 a modified truck was delivering live seafood to a restaurant.  A man in gumboots was standing in the bed, scooping fish out of large coolers and depositing them in the display aquariums outside the eatery.  His partner was running hoses built in to the truck to the curbside storm drain, getting rid of unnecessary water now that their merchandise had been unloaded.  Neither Liz nor I had seen this draining process before and both thought it was pretty neat – one of those little bits of ingenuity that you never think of but that when you see it seems both obvious and modestly remarkable.

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Read the full post on Seoul Sub→urban >>

 

 

 

Seoul Week: Nonhyeon Station

We’re celebrating Seoul Week on ExploreMetro! We’ve teamed up with Seoul Sub→urban to bring you stories and pictures from around Seoul. Every day this week we’ll bring you one of their profiles of a Seoul Subway station, today it’s Nonhyeon (논현역) .

Don’t forget you can download Explore Seoul for iPhone for just $0.99 this week!

Nonhyeon (논현역)

Line 7 – Station #732

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Arriving at Nonhyeon at noon, we emerged from the station to find the morning’s rains stopped and a bright midday sun glinting off puddles and still-wet street signs.  What had looked like it would be a gloomy, damp outing an hour ago had been transformed into the perfect weather for Nonhyeon-dong’s signature sport: armoire hunting.

From Exit 1 or Exit 8, all the way down Hakdong-ro to Hakdong Station runs Nonhyeon Furniture Street.  For several blocks both sides of the avenue are lined with almost nothing but furniture stores.  Most are of the high-end variety, which you would expect just south of the Sinsa-Apgujeong-Cheongdam golden triangle.

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A number of stores carry domestically made products or furniture whose style reflects Asian influence.  The most eye-catching of these was Tongyeongchilgi (통영칠기) where enormous lacquered chests, wardrobes, and armoires with mother-of-pearl inlay were on display in the front window.

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Most shops, though, seem to supply imported pieces or work that is heavily cued by European design.  This predilection is reflected in a quick scan of a number of the stores’ names: F. Angelico, Maison Francaise, Italiano, Leicht, Giotto.  Most of these places had classy, elegant furniture in classy, elegant buildings, but we also came across the occasional Old World mistake.

Read the full post on Seoul Sub→urban >>

Seoul Week: Dongdaemun Station

We’re celebrating Seoul Week on ExploreMetro! We’ve teamed up with Seoul Sub→urban to bring you stories and pictures from around Seoul. Every day this week we’ll bring you one of their profiles of a Seoul Subway station, today it’s Dongdaemun (동대문역) .

Don’t forget you can download Explore Seoul for iPhone for just $0.99 this week!

Dongdaemun Station (동대문역)

Line 1 – Station #128, Line 4 – Station #421

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It begins the moment you step off the subway.  There, on the platform, a man calls out to passengers, hawking the belts laid out in compartmentalized boxes at his feet.  Before you exit the station you’ll pass more people doing the same – with bags, with clothes, with battery-operated toys that flash and clatter – and then you go up the steps and you’re in Dongdaemun, where all this (and seemingly everything else) is happening, all the time.

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Acres of wholesale markets pull in old-timers in search of bargains, while the malls that are the wellspring of Korean fashion summon the young and style-conscious.  Sleek stores and developments coexist amicably with the gritty shops and restaurants that have occupied the innumerable back alleys for decades.  Dongdaemun combines the crusty insouciance of the dockyards with the pulsing strut of the catwalk.  Nowhere else in Seoul is quite like it.

The neighborhood is anchored by the eponymous Dongdaemun (동대문(Great East Gate) (Exit 6) or, more formally, Heunginjimun (흥인지문(Gate of Rising Benevolence).  One of Joseon-era Seoul’s four main gates, it was originally built in 1396, though the current structure dates from an 1869 reconstruction.  Besides being a beautiful example of traditional Korean architecture it serves as a useful reference point amid the often hectic surroundings.

Read the full post on Seoul Sub→urban >>

Seoul Week on ExploreMetro

This week we’re celebrating all things Korean! ExploreMetro’s newest iPhone/iPad app is Explore Seoul, which helps you navigate the complex metro system in one of Asia’s most vibrant cities. We’ve teamed up with Seoul Sub→urban, an awesome blog which covers things to do and see around Seoul’s subway stations. Every day this week we’ll be featuring a Seoul subway station, with stories and pictures from Seoul Sub->urban.

What’s more, all this week Explore Seoul for iPhone will be available for just $0.99, 50% off the usual price!

To follow along with Seoul Week, subscribe to our blog, or follow our Facebook, Twitter or Weibo feeds! We’ll have other giveaways and surprises throughout the week!

Seoul Week. Like Shark Week, but with more kimchi.

Shanghai Metro adds two more stations (242 and counting)

The Shanghai Metro has opened two more stations, bringing the total to 242. The new stations, Panguang Road (潘广路) and Liuhang (刘行) are towards the northern end of Line 7, in Baoshan District. The first/last train times on the rest of Line 7 are unaffected. Only one station on Line 7 (Qihua Road) now remains closed.

We’ve updated our online metro map, an update to our Shanghai Metro iPhone app will be available soon!

Explore Seoul Subway Map, now in the App Store

We’re delighted to announce that Explore Seoul Subway Map is now available on the iTunes App Store! It’s the seventh ExploreMetro app, and our first in Korea! The Seoul Subway is one of the biggest and busiest metro systems in the world. Now you can have an easy-to-use map with all 15 lines and 463 stations in your pocket, in English and Korean.

Fully up-to-date for 2011
Accurate subway map, includes every station on every line of the Seoul Subway. Free updates for future station openings and timetable changes.

Retina display and iPad support
Gorgeous maps which look great on the iPhone 4 and iPod touch (4th generation) high-resolution display.

Ready for iPad and iPad 2
Specially redesigned interface for the larger iPad screen. Flip the map over to see stations on a Google Map. View the video.

Google Maps for every station
Need to get your bearings at a station? Integrated Google Maps show you metro exits and nearby streets for every station.

Route-planner
A really easy route-planner. Get route, time and price information for any journey with just three taps.

“Find my nearest station”
Using your iPhone’s GPS, see a list of the closest metro stations to your current location.

Works offline
Everything works without an Internet connection. Search stations and plan routes on the go. Yes, even offline street maps!

 

We’re really keen to hear your feedback and suggestions about how to make Explore Seoul better. If you’re a fan of our other apps, updates to version 5 will be available very soon.

Offline Street Maps in ExploreMetro 5.0

One of the most requested features since we launched ExploreMetro’s apps for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad is offline street maps. It’s really handy to have a metro map for Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Taipei, Singapore or Hong Kong in your pocket, but many travellers don’t have a 3G connection while travelling, so they’re not able to access the Google Maps we provide for each station.

How do I get offline street maps?
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