Look around Seongsu-dong, and you will see a lot of red brick, rusted metal doors, and exposed concrete.
For decades, this was Seoul’s industrial engine. These streets were loud—packed with auto repair shops, printing presses, and handmade shoe factories.
When manufacturing slowed down, the big warehouses went quiet. But instead of tearing them down, people moved in.
Today the spaces are still huge, and the mix of neighbors is strange in the best way. A sleek fashion store can sit right next to a fully functioning auto shop.
And almost everything you’ll step into has a past life: a rice warehouse turned into a cavernous cafe, a metal workshop turned into a bakery, pop-up stores that treat old factory rooms like temporary stages.
So take your time in the alleyways. And every once in a while—stop, and look up. In Seongsu-dong, what’s happening above your head can tell you as much as what’s right in front of you.
