Daejeon

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Template:Infobox Korean city Daejeon Metropolitan City is a metropolitan city in the centre of South Korea, and the capital of South Chungcheong Province. It is the fifth largest city of South Korea with a population of 1,438,778 at the end of 2003.

Contents

History

Before Gyeongbu railway passed through Daejeon, it was a small field called Hanbat. In 1905 Gyeongbu railway started to transport; a station was built on the way from Seoul to Busan. Soon Honam railway was built to split at Daejeon. In 1932, the capital of Chungnam province moved from Gongju to Daejeon.

Geography

Latitude : N 36° 10' 50" ~ 36° 29' 47", Longitude : E 127 14' 54" ~ 127 33' 21"

Daejeon is located near the middle of South Korea. It is 167.3 km from Seoul, 294 km from Busan and 169 km from Gwangju.

Transportation

Daejeon is the center of transportation, two highway backbones, Gyeongbu highway and Honam highway join in Daejeon and two major railways, Gyeongbu railway and Honam railway meet in Daejeon. KTX passes through Daejeon, it takes less than one hour from Daejeon to Seoul. Daejeon is served by Cheongju Airport which is north of Cheongju.

A subway system with five lines is planned for Daejeon. The first part of this system, Daejeon Subway Line 1 began operation in March 2006. It is notably different from the system used in Seoul in the smaller car width, lack of doors between cars, using a total of four cars to a train instead of ten, and free space under the seats in constrast to the area under the seats in the Seoul Metropolitan Subway being used to contain the heaters.

Culture

In 1993, an international exposition (Expo '93) was held at Daejeon, and the EXPO Bridge was built for the event.

The city is also home to K-League soccer club Daejeon Citizen, and is also the hometown of noted women golfers Se Ri Pak and Jang Jeong as well as South Korean actor Kwon Sang-woo. Daejeon is also the hometown of left-handed pitcher Dae-Sung Koo.

The Daejeon Museum of Art, located in Dunsan Park, is a noted Korean art museum, focused on the convergence of art and technology. Since it was established in 1998, it has held numerous exhibitions on contemporary art.

Downtown

Daejeon has become the recipient of the country's effort to decentralize certain ministries of the national government. The middle of the city or the new downtown called Dunsan is where the effort has manifested itself. Newer, shinier, albeit structurally similar apartment complexes to that of the rest of the city, sprung up around the new government structures being constructed concurrently in just a few short years starting from the mid-1990s. Newer municipal buildings including the city's courts and the province's main parliamentary building soon followed. The result is a several square mile neighbourhood full of restaurants, standard Korean western-type bars and coffee shops. The area is a place for the workers of the new Daejeon to live close to their offices, most able to walk to work, and dine and shop in a new urban environment.

Administrative divisions

Daejeon is divided into 5 wards ("Gu").

NameHangulHanja
Daedeok-gu대덕구大德區
Dong-gu동구東區
Jung-gu중구中區
Seo-gu서구西區
Yuseong-gu유성구儒城區

See also

External link

Image:Expobridge.jpg Image:Daejeonview.jpg


Administrative divisions of South Korea Image:Flag of South Korea.svg
Special City
Seoul
Metropolitan Cities
Busan | Daegu | Daejeon | Gwangju | Incheon | Ulsan
Provinces
Chungcheongbuk-do | Chungcheongnam-do | Gangwon-do | Gyeonggi-do | Gyeongsangbuk-do | Gyeongsangnam-do | Jeju-do | Jeollabuk-do | Jeollanam-do
de:Daejeon

et:Daejeon fr:Daejeon ko:대전광역시 io:Daejon nl:Daejeon ja:大田広域市 no:Daejeon pl:Taejŏn pt:Daejeon ru:Тэджон fi:Daejeon sv:Daejeon zh:大田广域市