Four dispatches from Seoul, South Korea — May 2026. Each post stands alone. Together they document a single day across the city: from a 600-year-old neighborhood at dawn to a self-service BBQ table at midnight.
Dispatch 01 — Architecture + Culture
The Village That Seoul Built Around Itself
Bukchon Hanok Village — 15th-century stone alleys, curved giwa rooftops, and a $4 hanbok rental that unlocks free palace entry at Gyeongbokgung.
📍 Bukchon-ro 12-gil · 🎽 Artist Hanbok ~$4 · 🏛️ Gyeongbokgung Palace free with hanbok
Dispatch 02 — Neighborhood + Café Culture
The Neighborhood That Feels Like Somewhere Else — Then Doesn’t
Anguk-dong and Samcheong-ro: London Bagel Museum queue, Café Jinsun garden patio, and the red brick corner that looks like Palo Alto until a Seoul taxi turns the corner.
📍 Anguk Station · ☕ Café Jinsun ₩34,800 for two · 🥯 London Bagel Museum (queue: plan for it)
Dispatch 03 — Food + Heritage
The Alley That Hasn’t Changed Since the War
Jongno’s grilled fish alley — post-Korean War origin, KBS and MBC featured, ₩50,000 for Spanish mackerel, spicy squid, and soft tofu soup at 삼천포집.
📍 Jong-ro 40ga-gil · 🐟 삼천포집 ₩50,000 full table · 🚇 Jongno 5-ga Station
Dispatch 04 — Nightlife + City Design
₩17,900 and the City That Doesn’t Go Home
Why Seoul’s streets are full at 10pm on a Monday night — and what city design has to do with it. Self-service Korean BBQ in Hongdae: ₩17,900/person, all you can eat.
📍 Hongdae, Mapo-gu · 🥩 AYCE BBQ ₩17,900/person · 🚇 Hongik University Station
All dispatches published May 25, 2026. Photos shot on the day. All prices verified from receipts. No sponsored content.