We shape our buildings and afterwards our buildings
shape us, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill once said,
stressing the importance of the living environment.
This is quite true. A sound environment helps nurture cultured
citizens and a happy society, and the Korean government is pursuing
multilateral approaches to give every nook and cranny of the
country a touch up, so as to turn Korea into a pleasant and
delightful living space.
The government is concentrating its efforts to help people enjoy
their everyday life in their working and living space, said an
official from the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism to
Gonggam, a government weekly magazine.
"Environmental engineering not only changes the physical
dimension of places, but also breathes fresh life into their
general atmosphere, even altering people's characteristics and
personalities. New York was once a city teeming with crime. The
city government spent more time on environmental reform than on
cracking down on malicious crimes. Thanks to this [innovative]
approach, the city's crime rate went down by half in the 1990s,"
said the official.
When changing community environments, the Culture
Ministry sticks to a couple of principles. First, it encourages
local citizens to get involved in the remodeling, instead of
forcing them into it, and spends enough time listening to their
opinions. Second, the ministry seeks to preserve the traditional
value and original shape of a structure intact as much possible.
Consequently only a few cases need a total shake-up.
Among major upgrades carried out by the ministry is the
realization of walkable streets. Dongseongno (Street) in Daegu, an
art valley in Pocheon, and the area around Seoul Station are
typical examples.
Dongseongno is a thoroughfare about a kilometer long running
through the Jung-gu (Jung District) of the City of Daegu in
Gyeongsangbuk-do (North Gyeongsang Province). Only a year ago, the
street was filled with stalls and electrical facilities, but now it
is decorated with lilies, oak trees, performance stages, a public
square and fountains, thanks to the city government's efforts.
Street stalls have been replaced with road lamps and benches,
making the street one of the most beloved places where citizens
like to spend their time.
Pocheon Art Valley, an eco-friendly culture and art space in
Gyeonggi Province, was established in an abandoned quarry with the
support of the provincial government. The 140,000 square-meter plot
of land now features a stone sculpture park, a public performance
stage, an observatory and a 420-meter monorail which takes visitors
to the peak of Cheonju Mountain from the valley's entrance. The
50-meter vertical granite cliff is especially spectacular. The
7,000-square kilometer Cheonjuho (Cheonju Lake) around the Pocheon
valley makes visitors jaws go slack with awe.
The culture ministry in 2008 designated Pocheon Art
Valley as a candidate place to be developed as an "Art Creation
Belt," and a 1,200 square-meter space there will be filled with an
education exhibition center and cafes by 2011, thanks to the
injection of 5.3 billion won of government funds.
For the Seoul Station renovation project, the Culture Ministry
has allocated about 20 billion won. The ministry plans to restore
the building of the old and now disused station, National Historic
Spot No. 286, to its original shape as it looked when it was first
built in 1925. The building is known as one of the two most
aesthetic colonial structures along with the Chosen central bank
building (Historic Spot No. 280).
The station building will be reborn in March 2011 as a
mega-sized cultural complex with a museum of modern history,
exhibition and concert halls, seminar rooms and outdoor cafes.
When you go there now, you can view the long fence surrounding
the construction site. Walking along the fence, you can enjoy
photographs showing the over 100 years of history of Seoul Station.
The photos show the completion of the building's construction in
1925, famous Korean ballerina Choi Seung-hee arriving at the
station in 1928, group of people cheering for Korea's independence
in 1945, scenes of the pro-democracy movement 1980 and more.
Visitors to the area can also see the development of national
trains, from steam locomotive, diesel train to KTX.
* Adapted from Weekly Gonggam Magazine
By James Ro
Korea.net Staff Writer
SOURCE :
Korea.net