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Oil Tank Culture Park

Coordinates: 37°34′15″N 126°53′39″E / 37.57083°N 126.89417°E / 37.57083; 126.89417
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Oil Tank Culture Park
문화비축기지
Map
Motto"From Oil To Culture"
Location03914 87, Jeungsan-ro, Mapo, Seoul
Coordinates37°34′15″N 126°53′39″E / 37.57083°N 126.89417°E / 37.57083; 126.89417
Administered bySeoul Metropolitan Government
OpenExhibition Halls close on Mondays

The Oil Tank Culture Park (Korean문화비축기지; Hanja文化備蓄基地) is a renovated public park located in Mapo, Seoul, South Korea.[1]

Overview

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The Oil Tank Culture Park is a cultural complex located in west Seoul, in the vicinity of the World Cup Stadium. The space, which previously was an oil storage facility, has been renovated into an environmentally-conscious park that holds a number of exhibitions and cultural events along the year.[1] The oil reservoir tanks remains on the site and they have been transformed into performance venues, learning spaces and exhibitions halls.[2]

The six tanks that conformed the complex have been transformed into the following installations: the Culture Yard, the Glass Pavilion, the Stage, the Tank Type, the Culture Complex, the Story Hall and the Community Center.[3]

History

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The park was originally an oil storage facility constructed in 1976 in response to the oil crisis of 1973. Six tanks were installed at the foot of Maebongsan mountain to prepare for emergency situations. They were filled with 69.0 million liters of oil, enough to be consumed by the citizens of Seoul for a month. However, it was classified as a hazardous facility when the constructions for the World Cup Stadium began and was permanently closed in 2000, before the World Cup took place in Seoul in 2002.[4]

In 2013, the Seoul Metropolitan Government led a renewal project to transform the place into an eco-friendly culture complex and held an international design contest where various architectural firms participated. The winning design plan was "Petro: Reading the Story of the Site" by RoA Architects.[5]

Facilities

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  • Glass Pavilion: A multi-purpose space for exhibitions, workshop and artistic performances.
  • Stage: Indoor/outdoor performance hall.
  • Sustained Oil Tank: preserved tank that allow visitors to see the historic background of the place.
  • Culture Complex: A cultural space for performances, exhibitions and experiential programs.
  • Story Hall: Museum that display the transformation process from the oil reserve to the cultural park.
  • Community Center: Contains a laboratory, a cafeteria, a conference room and a small eco-library.
  • Culture Yard: An outdoor space where large-scale performances, festival and markets take place.[6]

Events

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Events that have taken place at the Oil Tank Culture Park:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Oil Tank Culture Park in Seoul: Abandoned Space Reimagined". 2018-12-04. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  2. ^ "Oil Reservoir Culture Park". english.visitseoul.net. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  3. ^ 문화비축기지. parks.seoul.go.kr. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  4. ^ 김, 도연 (2017-05-29). "'40년 금단의 땅' 마포석유비축기지 서울광장 10배 공원으로". Munhwa Ilbo.
  5. ^ rjkoehler. "Culture Tanks – SEOUL Magazine" (in Korean). Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  6. ^ 마포구청. "Oil Tank Culture Park | Theme tour | Recommended Tour | Culture/Tourism". 영어 홈페이지 (in Korean). Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  7. ^ Shurvell, Joanne. "National Museums, Parks And Monuments Provide Exciting New Locations For Seoul Fashion Week". Forbes. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  8. ^ Hae-yeon, Kim (2021-10-26). "Seoul Gourmet Week to deliver 'glocal' cuisines". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  9. ^ Eun-byel, Im (2021-10-17). "SIDance 2021 goes hybrid, featuring 77 works". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  10. ^ Bizwire, Korea (17 September 2020). "Drive-in Circus Festival Coming to Oil Tank Culture Park". Be Korea-savvy. Retrieved 2021-11-17.