In a Nutshell: I was part of the first ever group of foreigners given access to all stations across both lines of the Pyongyang Metro. This may sound mundane, but the restricted Pyongyang Metro is surely among the most mysterious yet beautiful transit systems on earth. Each of its sixteen stations are unique yet ultra-nationalistic in theme, showcasing North Korea’s revolutionary history, goals and achievements to impressionable commuters through a series of mosaics, murals and monuments. It’s a lavish underground museum long shrouded by foreign conspiracy theory. Sensationalism aside, here is my journey in over sixty photos of the beating heart of Pyongyang, the Pyongyang Metro.
About: I’m Elliott. I’m the tour director at North Korea tour operator Uri Tours. I travel a lot myself, sometimes to the unusual, weird and wacky. Earth Nutshell is where I share my experiences. Interested in visiting North Korea for yourself? Shoot me an email at [email protected].
To set the scene, here’s a small video snippet descending to the platforms with the sound of revolutionary anthems booming from antique loudspeakers central to the escalator…
Bonus:
Want to visit North Korea for yourself? I can help. I’m the tour director at Uri Tours, a North Korea tour operator. For inquiries you can contact me directly at [email protected].
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It is an amazing metro station. I would like to visit North Korea some day myself.
The reason that you couldn’t find the Ferguson picture online is probably because it was most likely taken by a Chinese photographer. I found a few references to it online. Here is one of them. http://share.youthwant.com.tw/DN3000419.html
This was a real treat. Having lived in South Korea for nearly 10 years, I always wanted to see what was on the other side of that DMZ. You mentioned the stance of the men in the subway, I asked this same question and was told that since every male is required to fulfill their civil duty, this stance is mandatory in the military.
Loved your photo’s, loved the descriptions and envy you for the opportunity!!
Thanks Robert, it must be surreal living so close — they speak Korean, they share similar heritage and they even share families but are otherwise now worlds apart and incommunicable. It always blows my mind that the distance between the DMZ to South Korea’s capital Seoul is only about 2.5 hours DRIVE. So close.
I’ve had quite a number of people mention the men’s stance, I think my interpretation was off-base here and you are right — it’s instead an old habit from military service. Which really, with a country of 11 years mandatory conscription, would make perfect sense!
Elliott, Elliot..Great article! How did you get into North Korea?
Hi Janis, tourism into North Korea is more prevalent than what first appears. Chinese tour operators exist that take Chinese nationals across for Pyongyang visitations (albeit with annoying restrictions, such as no Mausoleum) and there are a handful of well-respected foreign operators targeting other nationalities based out of China. I used one of these! As for the logistics, I flew in from Beijing to Pyongyang on North Korea’s flagship airline ‘Air Koryo’ and left the country on a train from Pyongyang > Sinuiju (Exit formalities) > Dandong (China).
Absolutely fascinating. I share your interest!
Maybe time for a trip of your own? 🙂
May I ask how you got there?
Hi Elliot,
Very nice photo’s, my compliments. I tried to find the photo in the newspaper and that was hard. I found it here: http://www.uriminzokkiri.com/index.php?ptype=gisa2&no=192899 that seems the North Korean news paper.
From that I found in Chinees sites like http://denglin.bokerb.com/583595.html
The wrong spelled text I could only find here: http://www.tigerdroppings.com/rant/o-t-lounge/st-louis-unarmed-teen-shot-and-killed-by-police-riot-in-progress/51477308/page-709/
So it looks like it was no photo but a still from Fox.
Very cool. Can you read North Korean?
Beautiful photos! very interesting to see a very personal part of a country we haven´t seen a lot from! Thank you for sharing!
The original photo of the article ,mentioned above can be found here:
http://dajia.qq.com/blog/473512048849328.html
(Found through google image search based on your pic).
Interestingly the photo in only featured on chinese blog sites…
Very interesting article. After a mention of agriculture, I got to thinking about the typical diet in N. Korea and then realized I couldn’t pinpoint a single obese individual in the images. I’m assume the food their was far less processed?