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@@KnowledgeInformation2 Hangul script may have been developed for the people but at same time it was made to replace old script called Idu to help with learning Hanja as well. Chinese kindergarten learning Roman alphabet to learn how to pronounce Chinese Hanja.
I lived in Korea for 5 years, and yeah, if I ever had enough money, I would buy some land here where I live in France and have a hanok built (with more modern amenities though, like double panned windows), I freak'n love hanoks, I've stayed in a few of them while I lived in Korea and always loved the experience
double panned windows need to required by law. I wonder how much energy wasted in poor insulation pre-war (pre 1945) house in old cities for heating and cooling translate to $
South Korea has most of what the world aspires to have. With a world-class manufacturing supply chain, such as semiconductors, batteries, biopharmaceutical production, shipbuilding, and defense technology, the future is very bright. South Korea is also a leader in cultural industries such as K-pop and K-dramas. The growing influence of Korean-speaking culture is driving the popularity of the Korean language and the Korean-related job market.
Koreans have played life-or-death identity game against the continent for about 2000 years. Language, alphabet, food, clothing, building, ...full. set. The problem is that here we are suffering population collapse. Politics is deeply divisive. And many people do not realize South Korea has become a major member of the West.
Just a modern history you can say it's influenced by western and Japanese but in really old past days like B.C. Korea and China are the only countries to rule everything everywhere and Japan at the time arr really governed by Korea and pots housing clothes everything shipped from Korean peninsula. The scene in your eyes are not built in only a few hundreds years but it's the result from 14000 years of Korean history.
Honestly, I am living in Seoul, the last architact really amazed me, that is in my opinion what is truly the Korean heritage, the first two just sounds somehow less impressive, since you can find similar elements with better design in Japan and China.
Timestamps (Powered by Merlin AI) 00:03 - South Korea's architectural renaissance intertwines tradition and innovation. 03:18 - Korean architecture reflects a mindful blend of tradition and nature. 06:31 - Korean architecture embraces tradition with modern technology. 09:45 - Korean architecture emphasizes harmony and balance with nature and people. 12:42 - Korean architects blend modernity with tradition in creating spaces for current lifestyle. 15:27 - Korean architecture reflects cultural identity through flexible and communal spaces 18:07 - Korea's architecture reflects its diverse history and evolving influences. 20:30 - Korean architecture fosters togetherness and individuality 22:54 - Korean architecture poised as next big export
How wonderful it is to blend tradition, with modern, and nature. American architects and builders such as Frank Lloyd wright, and Joseph Eichler had a similar vision.
I love Korean culture and don't understand why it's not as popular as other Asian cultures. Seoul isn't as big a destination internationally despite being one of the great world cities
@business, this is really not understanding the industry AT ALL. Unfortunately, architecture and spatial design is very slow. It has a delay of 5-10 years over the finalised design (ie, the aesthetics of it). All the mentioned characteristics are present in all top tier architectural design countries (Spain, Netherlands, Japan). _Korean architecture reflects a mindful blend of tradition and nature: As do all the rest of architectural practices around the world. _Korean architecture embraces tradition with modern technology. That has been proven to be a BIG mistake: technology DIMINISHES value of real estate, on average a 10% of the total real estate value. _ Korean architecture emphasizes harmony and balance with nature and people: As do all the rest of the architectural practices that are given the chance to do so. _ Korean architects blend modernity with tradition in creating spaces for current lifestyle: As do all the rest of the architectural practices that are given the chance to do so _ Korean architecture reflects cultural identity through flexible and communal spaces: As do all the rest of the architectural practices that are given the chance to do so _ Korea's architecture reflects its diverse history and evolving influences: As do all the rest of the architectural practices that are given the chance to do so _Korean architecture fosters togetherness and individuality: As do all the rest of the architectural practices that are given the chance to do so This is a VERY BAD video. More of an infomercial, to be honest. It shows that Korean architecture is WELL BEHIND THE CURVE, to be honest. And fostering international architecture adoption (it has taken China 25 years to have a world mid tier architectural practice recognized, MAD architects) is not as fast as exporting cars or exporting visual culture.
Wait, what ??? As far as i know. Chinese architecture is most decorative amd ornamentalist followed by korean(most colorfull also), while japanese has most simplistic and minimalist, sleak architecture . Whole japanese philosophy runs behind these things.
@@iamsheep modern Chinese unfortunately has went more into western Influence tbh. And abondoned some traditional thinking. Maybe Taiwan still has that but they are also heavy influenced by Japan.
@@D__Ujjwal the ancient buildings of Japan and Korea were all influenced by China. The imperial palaces of Kyoto and Nara were replicas of those in Changan (modern day Xi’an). The reason you think Chinese buildings are more decorative is because those are from the later Qing dynasty, whereas Korea and Japan are mostly influenced by China’s Ming, Song and Tang Dynasties
Those three East Asian countries are geographically close each other and it should be normal that they use the similar materials to build the houses. But as this documentary explained, Korean architecture has its uniqueness as like Japanese or Chinese architecture does. They put more respect to the mother nature while building houses or palaces. Ancient Korean people tried not to manipulate or change the nature that much due to the human’s needs, instead, tried to keep the original landscape and view in and outside of the house, which I really like this aspect. Also I think, it also meets to the current trends such as environment friendly, sustainable lifestyle.
Hàn Quốc và Singapore là 2 cái bẫy du lịch ở châu Á, họ quảng cáo rất nhiều trên các phương tiện thông tin nhưng khi đến nơi thì thấy thật là phí tiền khi đi du lịch ở 2 quốc gia đắt đỏ này. Ngược lại đi du lịch đến Trung Quốc rất đáng đồng tiền, phần lớn cảnh quan kiến trúc điều đẹp và hoành tráng hơn so với trên hình, tóm lại đi du lịch Singapore và Hàn Quốc là không tôn trọng sức lao động của chính mình.
Traditionally, Japan copied Korea, who copied China. Some of the traditional palaces in Korea and Japan are replicas of Chinese architecture, mostly from the Tang, Song and Ming dynasties. Korean traditional dress was mostly copies of Ming Dynasty formal dress, with gradual changes over time.