Yongin Daejanggeum Park, Film studio in Yongin, South Korea
Yongin Daejanggeum Park is a film studio in South Korea that features reconstructed streets and buildings from different historical periods. The grounds contain multiple outdoor and indoor filming areas with sets designed to represent how places looked at different points in Korean history.
The studio was first established in 2011 and received its current name in 2015 after a famous television drama series. This renaming marked a shift in the facility's identity and connected it more directly to a well-known piece of Korean television history.
The buildings on the grounds represent architecture from different periods of Korean history, showing how people lived and constructed their homes. Walking through these reconstructed spaces helps visitors imagine what daily life looked like in those earlier eras.
The site is open year-round, though spring through fall offers the most comfortable visiting conditions. Traditional clothing rentals are available to help you blend into the historical settings when taking photographs or exploring the reconstructed areas.
The studio functions both as an active filming location for television productions and as a destination where visitors come to explore and photograph themselves in period costumes. This dual role is unusual, as most film studios are closed to the public, but this one welcomes visitors to walk through the same sets used by professional productions.
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