15.1Km 2024-04-18
2, Gwangbokjungang-ro, Jung-gu, Busan
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15.1Km 2024-04-23
1, Gwangbok-ro 55beon-gil, Jung-gu, Busan
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15.1Km 2024-04-18
40, Gwangbok-ro, Jung-gu, Busan
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15.1Km 2024-04-18
1F, 13, Junggu-ro, Jung-gu, Busan
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15.1Km 2020-12-04
61-1 Gwangbok-ro Jung-gu Busan
+82-51-244-1120
It is a restaurant that makes Jjamppong (Korean spicy seafood noodle soup) with 8 kinds of noodles. The best menu at this restaurant is noodles in black bean sauce. This Chinese (cuisine) restaurant is located in Jung-gu, Busan.
15.1Km 2024-04-23
Daehyun Primall Busan, 786, Jungang-daero, Busanjin-gu, Busan
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15.1Km 2020-03-27
17, Haeundaehaebyeon-ro 209beonna-gil, Haeundae-gu, Busan
+82-51-741-3888
Dongbaekseom Hoetjip is a nearby gourmet restaurant. It is a three story white building with a curved glass front on the second floor. The hearty modeum-hoe (assorted sliced raw fish) is the flagship dish of this restaurant. The portion is quite filling, despite the deceptively low price. You can enjoy the fresh raw fish of Busan, or any of the other dishes such as hoe-deopbap (raw fish bibimbap) and maeun-tang (spicy fish stew) which are also tasty.
15.1Km 2024-04-23
190, Saha-ro, Saha-gu, Busan
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15.1Km 2024-03-06
Gwangbok-ro, Jung-gu, Busan
+82-51-253-8253
Gwangbok-dong Cultural & Fashion Street is about 600 m long from the entrance to Gukje Market. The street has historically featured many clothing shops, and it is quite crowded at night or on weekends. Every December, the area also hosts the Busan Christmas Tree Cultural Festival, which turns the street into a pedestrian-only area. There are plenty of good restaurants in the area, which is a great place to feel the vitality and energy of Busan’s youth.
15.1Km 2024-10-29
4 Nampo-gil, Jung-gu, Busan
+82-1688-3010
Busan’s modern movie district was originally little more than a pair of cinemas that were built following Korea’s liberation from Japanese colonial rule over half a century ago. However, major renovations took place ahead of the first Busan International Film Festival (BIFF), and the newly transformed district was named BIFF Square on September 13, 1996.
Having been remade into a cultural tourist attraction promoting the advancement of Korea’s film industry, BIFF Square has contributed to Busan’s status as an international cultural tourist city. The 428 meter-long street stretching from the Buyeong Theater in Nampo-dong to the overpass in Chungmu-dong was divided into “Star Street” and “Festival Street,” and on the eve of the festival each year the “BIFF Square Ground Opening” is held here. During the ceremony, events such as the hand printing of famous movie celebrities and Nunkkot Jeomdeung (snow-flower lighting) take place. A district such as BIFF Square, crowded with first-run theaters in a city is rare not only in Asia but Europe as well, and for this reason it holds great potential. In recent years, the square has grown into a more complex area, featuring not only movie theaters but also shops and leisure facilities, attracting growing numbers of young visitors and tourists.