In Euljiro, hiddenness isn’t a branding gimmick. It’s a survival strategy.
Up on the second and third floors of these old concrete buildings, there are bars and cafes that barely advertise their existence. Sometimes it’s just a sticker. Sometimes it’s a scrap of tape with a name written on it. The doors stay heavy and unwelcoming, because the moment you start acting like a normal storefront—big sign, bright facade—you make it easier for someone to notice you, question your permits, and shut you down.
A lot of these spaces were never designed to be nightlife. For years, the upper floors were basically leftover square footage: storage, parts, paper. Cheap, drafty, reached by steep staircases that smell like wet cement. That neglect became an opening for young cooks, bartenders, designers—people who needed space in a city where space is expensive.
What makes Euljiro feel so strange is that the industrial neighborhood never fully leaves. It just changes shifts.
Downstairs, behind the roll-up doors, the day work is still there: the machine shops, the cutters, the printing presses—the same tight, alley-by-alley chain of specialists. And then, around six o’clock, the metal shutters come down with a deafening clatter, and above them, the night places flicker on.
Sometimes the overlap is literal. You’ll be sitting upstairs with a drink, and your glass will start to tremble, almost imperceptibly. Through the soles of your shoes you can feel a low, steady vibration: a die-cutting machine running late, directly beneath your chair.
That’s the vertical stack of Euljiro. Modern leisure resting on top of old labor, separated by one concrete slab, connected by the same narrow staircase.
