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No need to fly: Experience Japan in Korea

By Choi Jae-hee
Published : Nov. 15, 2022 - 15:41

A view of Nijimori Studio in Dongducheon, Gyeonggi Province, north of Seoul. (Courtesy of Nijimori Studio)

Friends and couples in kimonos take pictures on streets lit by colorful paper lanterns under the eaves of Japanese-style houses and shops.

Food stalls' yakitori, takoyaki and platters of beautifully arranged sashimi tempt the appetites of passersby.

At a shinto shrine, people write prayers or wishes on paper strips and bamboo plaques and hang them on wooden hooks.


An alley in Nijimori Studio lined with Japanese-style restaurants. (Courtesy of Nijimori Studio)


Paper strips or bamboo plaques on which guests wrote their wishes and prayers hang on wooden hooks of one of shinto shrines at Nijimori Studio. (Courtesy of Nijimori Studio)

This corner of Dongducheon, just north of Seoul, may be a picture-perfect slice of Japan, but if you came to the same spot years back, you would find a US military base.

The 40,000-square-meter plot, which was part of Camp Casey until 2012, is now home to the Nijimori Studio theme park.

The exotic village is one of several Japanese-themed tourist attractions that popped up in South Korea amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

While Japan was closed to tourists, they offered travel-hungry Koreans a chance to immerse themselves in the culture of the neighboring country. Now with the border open, a big surge in interest in Japan travel here is fueling the business boom.

Song Ji-eun, an office worker in her 20s, who used to enjoy spa trips to Sapporo before the COVID-19 pandemic occurred, recently stayed at a ryokan-style guesthouse at the Nijimori Studio. She described the experience a “vicarious satisfaction.”

“Japanese vibes here seem quite authentic to some extent,” Song said.

With the room featuring tatami flooring, a bathtub made of Japanese Hinoki wood and a private open-air bath, the one-night stay felt like you’re transported to Kyoto in an instant.

“Japan was where I visited the most (for holiday) next to Jeju Island. After traveling abroad has become difficult (due to pandemic restrictions,) I started to look for unique spots in Korea,” she said.


A private room for one-day tea classes. (Courtesy of Nijimori Studio)

Nijimori Studio draws Korean fans of Japanese comics or movies as well.

A search with the hashtag Nijimori Studio in Korean on Instagram returns a host of pictures and short videos shared by cosplayers dressed up as fictional Japanese characters, from Kaonashi, a character in Studio Ghibli film “Spirited Away,” to the schoolgirl from the television series “Sailor Moon.”

Ryokan-style hotels are an emerging trend in the Korean hospitality industry. A number of luxury hotels with traditional Japanese aesthetics have recently opened here.


A ryokan-style hotel in Namhae, South Gyeongsang Province. (Courtesy of Hotel Chiyu)

At one newly-built Japanese-style accommodation located in Namhae, South Gyeongsang Province, guests can experience Japanese outdoor spa in their room which has a tub on a balcony overlooking the ocean. Its dining room is decorated with wooden dining tables and tatami-mat flooring.

Meanwhile, Japanese vibes have also entered Korea’s dessert cafe scene.

In mid-October, local fans of Studio Ghibli, Japan’s most renowned animation company, opened a coffee shop inspired by a bakery shop featured in the hit film "Kiki's Delivery Service.”


Visitors take pictures in front of “Koriko Cafe,” situated in Seoul's hip Yeonnam-dong, on Monday. (Choi Jae-hee / The Korea Herald)

The coffee house was buzzing Monday with visitors armed with selfie sticks looking for the perfect Instagram shot. Some stood in lines to take a photo at a certain spot in the shop’s garden.

Named after the town where the young witch Kiki lives in the movie, the two-story coffee shop dubbed “Koriko Cafe,” situated in Seoul's hip Yeonnam-dong, is furnished with an array of accessories, goods and desserts like cakes and muffins featuring Ghibli's most lovable characters.


Stationery items featuring characters from Studio Ghibli's "Kiki's Delivery Service" are displayed at “Koriko Cafe.”(Choi Jae-hee / The Korea Herald)


Desserts and coffee sold at “Koriko Cafe." (Courtesy of Koriko Cafe)

With soundtracks from animated films playing, character seat cushions and cute ornaments radiate a cozy and vintage Japanese aesthetic, while vivid colors of the building’s walls and roofs conjure up images of the scenes from Studio Ghibli movies.

“The dessert shop is more than just a lovely cafe. It is a playground for ‘kidults’ like me and a fan platform for anime lovers," said Yoon Na-rae, a female customer in her 30s, who bought a coin purse with an image of Totoro on it.

Pent-up travel demand amid COVID-19-related border restrictions appears to have driven the popularity of Japanese-style entertainment facilities here.

Japan had halted visa-free entry for Korean nationals starting March 2020 to control the entry of foreign coronavirus patients, while shutting down its borders completely to foreign nationals in November last year. Last month, the neighboring country resumed its visa waiver programs for 68 countries and regions after nearly two years and seven months.

Demand for Japan tourism has been soaring in line with the eased travel restrictions. According to data from online ticketing site Interpark, the number of flight bookings to Japan between Oct. 1-22 jumped 589 percent from a month ago. Of the total international flight reservations, the Japan route accounted for 48 percent, the highest share followed by the Southeast Asia region (36 percent).




By Choi Jae-hee (cjh@heraldcorp.com)

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