Daebul Hotel
The building now operates as a museum. The first floor covers the history of the building, and the second the history of Jung District in the 1960s to 1970s.
History
The hotel started as a two-story Japanese-style wooden building in 1884. Due to lack of facilities to accommodate foreigners, the building was rebuilt in 1888 and became a three-story Western style building. It was operated by Hori Hisataro (堀久太郞), a Japanese shipping agent. It was frequented by sailors in its early history.
Hotels in Incheon began to decline with the opening of the Gyeongin Line in 1899. Daebul Hotel closed around 1907. In 1918, Chinese people including Lai Shaojing (Chinese: 賴紹晶) took over the hotel and opened the Beijing cuisine restaurant Zhonghualou (Chinese: 中華樓). It remained in operation until early 1970 and was used as a rental house until it was demolished in 1978.
Reconstruction
In 2011, a private business rediscovered the remains of the building, and the Cultural Heritage Administration recommended that the building be preserved. The government moved to recreate the building as an exhibit. They were met with opposition from some civic groups calling it a "waste of budget" that restores cultural heritage without thorough historical research. Nevertheless, the reconstruction was completed in 2018.
See also
References
- ^ Choe, Chong-dae (2021-05-23). "Classically-styled hotels". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ Korea Tourism Organization. "Daebul Hotel Exhibition Hall (대불호텔전시관)". VisitKorea.or.kr. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ Shim, Hong-bo (2023). "A Study on Conflicts in Restoration Projects of Modern Cultural Heritage for Sustainable Tourism Development - Focusing on Daebul Hotel, Jung-gu, Incheon -". Journal of Convergence on Culture Technology. 9 (2): 161.
- ^ Neff, Robert (2023-07-30). "Bar fights and Russian spies: Just another day at Daibutsu Hotel". The Korea Times. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ Choe, Eun-ji (2018-02-09). '복원 논란' 국내 최초 호텔 대불호텔 전시관 탈바꿈. Yonhap News (in Korean).
External links
Media related to Daebul Hotel at Wikimedia Commons
- Tourist information (in English)
- Museum homepage (in Korean)