Edmonton Journal

Revered S. Korean gate restored by hand

Fire destroyed historic site five years ago

- Foster Klug

SEOUL, Sou th Korea — Five years after being torched by a disgruntle­d elderly man, the stone and wood southern gate to the old walled capital of Seoul has been painstakin­gly restored to its late 14th-century glory by a small army of master craftsmen using traditiona­l tools.

From the hand-carved stones of the walls flanking Sungnyemun gate, to the finely wrought touches on the inner beams of the graceful, upwardly curving roof, each detail of what’s considered the country’s top treasure is meant to hearken back to the day the gate was completed in 1398. On the ceiling beneath the centre archway, two large whiskered and horned dragons are rendered in vibrant yellow, green, blue, pink and orange scales.

Ahead of its public opening Saturday, reporters on Monday got a tour of the gate where royal officials of the Joseon Dynasty unveiled policies, offered prayers for rain and hung the heads of executed criminals.

The two-story pavilion stands in vivid contrast to the surroundin­g glass-and-steel skyscraper­s and the bustling, traffic-choked streets that radiate from the gate into a city that has seemed to be in a perpetual building frenzy since the 1950-53 Korean War.

A team led by master carpenters, tile makers, stone carvers, blacksmith­s and painters laboured to restore the gate — work that officials say could have taken one to two years using modern tools and methods.

Instead, workers trimmed timber with axes and chisels, hammered massive stones into shape, fired handmade roof tiles in kilns before affixing them to the roof using traditiona­l tools and worked in as much of the surviving original timber as possible. Workers even wore traditiona­l Korean clothing, regardless of the weather.

“Traditiona­l methods guarantee a more natural and authentic look, whereas machines produce a glossy but artificial feel,” said Choi Jong-deok, a government official who oversaw the project until earlier this year.

The gate, also known as Namdaemun, was destroyed in February 2008 by a man angry over the way the government handled a land dispute with him. The arsonist is serving a 10-year prison term. The fire destroyed 90 per cent of the gate’s upper floor and 10 per cent of its lower floor, Seoul’s Cultural Heritage Administra­tion said.

The loss of the gate in a massive, man-made fire shocked South Koreans, many of whom have a deep emotional attachment to Sungnyemun and view it as the public face of their architectu­ral heritage. The gate, earlier renovated in the 1960s, is a staple in government and business publicatio­ns promoting visits to South Korea. The restoratio­n cost $22.5 million, officials said. The gate has been fitted with heat and flame detectors, alarms, sprinklers and closed circuit television monitors.

 ?? Ahn Young- joon/ The Associat ed Press ?? Five years after being torched by an arsonist, South Korea’s most revered historic site, Sungnyemun gate in Seoul, is set to reopen.
Ahn Young- joon/ The Associat ed Press Five years after being torched by an arsonist, South Korea’s most revered historic site, Sungnyemun gate in Seoul, is set to reopen.

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