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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Astounding photos! Thank you for the stunning glimpse into living, breathing totalitarianism.
In the posted newspaper with the person holding the sign for “Fight for ur rigts”, I was able to find that photo. It appears in a number of what look like Chinese websites, such as this:
http://www.chinanews.com/gj/2014/08-21/6514154.shtml
and here (in color):
http://xw.qq.com/news/20141126119076/NEW2014112611907604
What’s weird, or suspicious, is that in Google Image searches, that photo appears ***ONLY*** in Chinese websites, no American or any other websites. Hmmmm.
I found the photo by doing a screenshot. Then using GraphicConverter on the Mac, I used the unskew tool to restore a rectangular shape, then changed the levels to a more natural look. The result found matches on Google Image right away. Then using THAT image, it was easy to find more, including the color versions — ALL on Chinese websites.
Thenk you! Very, very interesting! You are welcome to Moscow metro.
☭
That is actually very close to how metro looks in Minks (Belarus)
Cool article! It’s a really great window to part of Pyongyang which we don’t see often. Thanks for the share.
So much art…. so little time…. 🙁
Not really relevant to this long and interesting article but the photo of the “fight for ur rigts” protester in front of the Furniture For Less store at 9020 W Florissant Ave in St. Louis, Missouri appears to be from the People’s Daily newspaper in China. Here’s the source: http://world.people.com.cn/n/2014/0820/c1002-25506198-3.html
Great story. Thank you for sharing the experience with us all
Thanks for this wonderful tour of the Pyongyang Metro. Having lived for a time in old East Berlin I can certainly vouch for those trains!
I’m wondering if you’ve had any responses from any North Koreans you met (‘guides’/chaperones) that you may have befriended, about your write-up?
Thank you for a very enjoyable and interesting read. I discovered it because it made the news at South Korea’s YTN news channel. (pasted into the “website” field).
Last sentence in the article says (approximately): “Even if the shape of stations, propagandizing the system, is a bit unfamiliar, doesn’t it seem that the citizens going to their workplace and back home with the subway aren’t very much different from us?”
Thanks so much for sharing this amazing piece of insight!