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Showing posts with label Busan X the Sky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Busan X the Sky. Show all posts

Friday, July 11, 2025

Busan (South Korea) - Bus-an around this town

Busan (South Korea)

10 July - 11 July 2025

I had originally set out for Korea with the simplest of plans: ten days in Seoul, nothing more. I had it in my head that the capital was big enough, bold enough and brimming with enough energy to keep me entertained…it was enough, or so I thought. But if there’s one thing I’ve learned about myself, it’s that travel rarely stays confined to something so neat and compartmentalised. That restless wanderlust is always bubbling beneath the surface, just waiting for the smallest spark, and the ignition point is mighty low. It doesn’t take much for inspiration. Mine came in the form of a picture , somehow I stumbled across these quirky, upright sky capsules gliding along an elevated seaside railway, like a string of brightly colour tic-tacs set against a horizon of endless blue. Where was this whimsical scene? It didn’t take me long for my travel guidance system to lock in - Busan, South Korea – the second-largest city in the country, a port town flung across the other side of country, perched dramatically on the edge of the Sea of Japan. A little investigation  uncovered an inviting city with beach or two and what seemed to be a  totally different vibe to Seoul. I had to be there.

That one image cracked my plans wide open, now Seoul alone wasn’t enough. Busan promised a whole different flavour of South Korea ,  beaches where locals flock for sunrises, sprawling seafood markets where tanks of live crabs and octopus slosh under neon lights and hillsides tangled with colourful houses that tumble down towards the harbour. It wasn’t just another stop; it felt like it would be that counterpoint to what I understood to be the relentless urban drive  of Seoul — saltier, more relaxed and touched with a raw coastal charm. In that moment, my trip stretched itself outwards and I knew I had to take a ride of one those sky capsules and see where this detour would take me.

Seoul Central Station - KTX platforms - Seoul - South Korea

Crossing the Han River - heading south to Busan - Seoul - South Korea

I sent this map to Inga - showing her my location - I was about 30 mins out of Busan

Everything in Seoul functions with a seeming effortlessness. Even if you’re a foreigner, there’s logic to the way things are constructed and throughout. My post work afternoon escape to Busan involved a couple of metro stops and then a very easy connection at Seoul Central on the KTX. Obviously purchasing a ticket online was simple and arriving at the station, and then leaving was as ‘easy breezy’ as you would like. I boarded the KTX (Koreas High Speed Rail Train) as is stopped for its allocated 8-10 min duration on platform 14 at the Seoul Central Station – and then the next thing you knew, we were out. All it was going to take was 3hrs to get me as fully ‘far-flung’ as you could be from Seoul, across the country in an instant.

As the KTX train sped south out of Seoul, the city’s skyscrapers gave way to rolling green hills, sleepy villages, and the kind of landscapes that made it clear I was headed somewhere entirely different. In less than three hours I’d be at the southern edge of the peninsula, in Busan — South Korea’s second-largest city, but one that couldn’t feel more distinct from the capital. Where Seoul is sharp-edged and relentless, Busan has an untamed quality to it, shaped by its coastline, its ports, and its people’s easy relationship with the sea.

Stepping out of the station, I felt it immediately. The air carried that salt-air feel

I jumped onto a now familiar metro, stop 113 – Busan station – with my ultimate destination being Haeundae, Busan’s most famous beach, what I mentally dubbed as the ‘Copacabana’ of South Korea. A long golden strip of captivating sand and high rises that on paper looked a little bit like the Gold Coast but somehow a lot more inviting. My first impressions were formed by a relatively long walk from Haeundae station that upon exiting dropped me straight onto Gunam-ro, the main thoroughfare of Haeundae, cutting  through the beating entertainment heart of the sea-side suburb. It was like getting swept into a living tide, neon lights blazing overhead, restaurants full, with the air thick of wonderful aromas and the streets buzzing with energy. There was immediately something alluring and mesmerising about it. It was a little bit Vegas, a little bit Dubai and a little bit wonderful. By the time I had mentally tick-boxed about 20 places that I wanted to try for dinner or drinks, I’d been expelled out the other side of Gunam-ro and was onto the beach in search for my place of accommodation for the next (3) nights.

Stop 113 - Busan Station - Busan - South Korea

Gunam-ro - 
Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Haeundae Beach - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

And surely, there it was, South Korea’s very own Copacabana. The promenade was alive with pedestrians, joggers chasing the last light, and revellers spilling into the evening, lured by the glow of neon, the hum of bars, and the irresistible pull of bustling restaurants. My home for the next few nights, the Mipo Oceanside Hotel, sat perfectly at the top end of the beach , a fabulous perch to soak it all in. After checking in, I made my way to the rooftop bar, where with a drink in hand I gazed down the sweeping curve of the beach, letting the rhythm of the place wash over me. For a country that had never sat high on my travel radar, South Korea was already surprising me these first steps felt fresh, exciting, and unexpectedly delightful.

Breakfast view - Mipo Oceanside Hotel - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Working indoors during my stay in Korea was hardly a challenge because I knew that once 4pm rolled around that I was only mtrs away from the something new. In  Huaendae I was a short hop from the beach and the immediate attractions of the areas. Within my immediate vicinity was Mipo station, the boarding location for the Sky capsules that had initially drawn me to the city all those months earlier, and just as close by was Busan X the Sky, the largest observatory in Korea, located in the Huaendae LCT Landmark tower. This was where I decided to go first. After purchasing my tickets for a  the leisurely ride on the Sky capsule (due to the 2+ hr waiting times), I made my way to the tower and up the 411 mtrs to the top of the second tallest building in Korea.

Huaendae LCT Landmark Tower - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

The spectacular view from Busan X the Sky - Huaendae LCT Landmark Tower - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Selfie time - Busan X the Sky - Huaendae LCT Landmark Tower - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Busan X the Sky - Huaendae LCT Landmark Tower - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Wow, and what view it was, spectacular without doubt. From looking out onto the ocean to the immediate surrounds of the city, there was definitely an appeal to Busan. Occupying prime location on the shoreline, the city looked as though it had truly utilised its gifted aesthetical qualities to achieve a visual appeal that made you take notice.  I was lucky to have come up on a very clear, blue sky day that was kind enough to punctuate the view with its own style. Very impressive.

Making my way down from the X, I walked around 15 mins to Mipo station and to the start of my little Sky capsule escapade.

These little capsules were my first introduction to Busan. I recall seeing them on some random YouTube video and thinking that they were surreal, strikingly offbeat but somehow cool. Seeing the colourful capsules slowly traverse the coastline just forced me to imagine myself there, and now, here I was.

 Haeundae sky capsule - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

 Haeundae sky capsule - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

 Haeundae sky capsule - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Selfie time again -  Haeundae sky capsule - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea


Boarding these little ‘bite-sized’ transporters you realise that there’s nothing more to them than novelty and location. They’re not overly functional but they’re beguiling enough that you just don’t concern yourself with the why, you simply enjoy the ride – and they don’t move at any startling pace, literally pedestrian like, you can certainly walk faster than these travel pods,  but also, it allows you to engage with the coastline in a very unique. Sure, maybe they’re gimmicky and a one-time event but by the time I got to the end-point, Cheongsapo station (Songjeong) beach, I was more than enough satisfied.

 Haeundae sky capsule - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

 Haeundae sky capsule & blue line beach train- Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

The walk back into Haeundae was an equally pleasing experience. With the sun slowly beginning to sink lower in the sky, and the ocean beating against the rocky cliffs, I walked alongside the sky capsule track and the coastal train blue line back to Huaendae beach – which in turn offered me enough time to make the most of a Friday night evening in this beach side locale.

Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

Haeundae - Busan - South Korea

That evening in Huaendae was a blast, slowly making my through some bars that were beachside and then into the seafood markets that ran for what seemed like forever, just off Gunam-ro. With that said, I can’t exactly answer when or why my love for seafood has dwindled in recent years but had this had been another time, perhaps 10 yrs ago, this area would have been an absolute paradise. As it was, the seafood bonanza and the ‘show’ was such a great source of entertainment but not a drawcard for my palette. On this evening I made my way to a Korean BBQ joint which until now, somehow,  I had never tried – and my friends, it was love at first bite! There was something about cooking a mix of meats and then wrapping them in a green leaf or two that has a mix of associated condiments that it both satisfying and moreish. It was subtle at first, but with an accompanying shot or 10 of soju, the oil and fat of the meat paired perfectly with the drink to make this just a wonderful combination. So much so that still, nearly two months after my adventure I’ve ditched most of my bread for leaves of Wombok and Iceberg – every bit of meat is wrapped and ingested, South Korean style.

There's something exhilarating - very Asian - and slightly dystopian about the glowing neon feel - I loved if!!! Gunam-ro - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea 

Gunam-ro - Haeundae - Busan - South Korea 

A wonderful Friday evening extended out to perhaps 11pm or 12am. I didn’t have the internal fortitude to push out any longer but I also knew that I had a Saturday up my sleeve to go and explore Busan a little bit more. From what I had seen thus far, I was certainly already looking forward to it!