Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

Welcome to Daejeon – South Korea’s fifth-largest city, and second-fastest-growing city only to Seoul. According to Wikipedia, it’s population as of 2005 was 1,451,792, and is about an hour and a half south of Seoul by train. I came from the south in Busan, which took a little longer – no big deal since the trains are pretty efficient and usually very clean.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

The first oddity I noticed was the signage in the Daejeon train station is a map of the Seoul subway system (top left corner). We’re an hour and a half away from Seoul, and Daejeon isn’t connected to it… Another oddity was the placement of these signs and the tourist information center – on the departing side instead of the arriving side. The two sides are pretty separate, even though they’re housed under the same roof. To get from one side to the other, you have to go all the way out of the station to street level, then turn around and re-enter the other side a couple of hundred meters away.

 

Daejeon train station is essentially connected to Daejeon subway station. Since there’s only one line there’s no getting confused about transferring or anything – just know which way you’re headed. The only problem with one line is that it hardly covers the city – but I’ll get to that later on.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

Seoul’s subway, as well as Busan’s, uses tickets or stored-value cards; Daejeon’s system uses tokens about the size of a poker chip. Buy the one-trip token for 1,000 won or 1,100 won from any of the automated machines (buy up to 4 at a time for later on). Scan it on the pad in the front of the turnstile to get on the subway; when you reach your destination, drop the token in the coin slot.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -
The bus system in Daejeon is fairly well-organized and reasonably easy to understand as far as the maps go. Like most other bus systems in Korea, it can be difficult to figure out which direction the bus is going – and the map is entirely in Korean – brush up on your hangeul!
My destination was to be Expo Park – where an international expo was held in 1993 with the theme of “The Challenge of a New Road of Development”. It was a big deal, and left the city with some great permanent facilities after the expo. After riding the subway to the nearest subway station (the Government Complex Daejeon Station – yes, that’s really the name of the station), I figured I could catch a bus from there, right? Um, no, not quite… A brochure I picked up about the Expo Park suggested looking for several buses – which didn’t stop anywhere near the subway station.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

After walking for awhile in the direction I thought was the Expo Park, I discovered another park along the way. A nice little area, and a walking trail for the walkers / joggers of the area, but not what I came to see.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

I came across this odd scene on the side of a building. Not real people, of course, but public art? I’m confused…
Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -
A Digital Town – closed for the day (I was meandering around Daejeon on January 1st, which is a national holiday where everything closes – hindsight being 20/20 and all I probably would’ve found something else to do on the holiday).
Eventually I came across a bus that ran by Expo Park, so I boarded it:

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

Hey, look, Expo Park!!

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

The river across the road from Expo Park.

Again, being January 1st, things were more like a ghost town than a tourist attraction. Some faint music was coming from inside the park, but I decided to stay on the bus since it was cold outside.

 

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

And coming up on your left… nothing… The bus route apparently took us into an area called Smart City – an area of apartments and lots of construction happening nearby. The infrastructure is there – now all that’s needed are some letters and hangeul to tell us what really is left.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -
Smart City – a group of tall apartment buildings, and no one around. Again, January 1st – go on any other day and I’m sure it’s a different story.
Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

A convention center in the area – nothing special to see here for the meandering tourist like me.

Eventually it got too cold to walk around, so I hopped in a taxi and headed to another area of Daejeon called Yuseong-gu.

Destination: Daejeon, South Korea - South Korea -

Yuseong is one fairly glitzy area of Daejeon that seems emptier than it should be. While it’s most famous for the Yuseong Hot Springs / Spa (유성 온 천), there’s quite a few restaurants, bars, and a few ‘business clubs’ (although one can only guess what sort of ‘business’ goes on inside). On one hand, the two times I went were both cold, and one was New Year’s Night – a day when most Koreans were likely staying at home enjoying the holiday, or simply staying in because of the temperature.

If I go back to Daejeon in the future, I’ll know to navigate better by using the bus instead of the subway… There’s a lot to see – getting around can be a little difficult sometimes, but based on the tiny bit I saw it’s worth the trouble.

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