Chungcheongnam-do(Gongju-si)

The Kapsa Youth Hostel is an educational trip, company training, family, and personal hostel.


Gyeongsangnam-do(Namhae-gun)

Goraedream Pension, located in the south coast of Korea, benefits from the fresh air coming from Seolheulsan Mountain. It is located in an area where the refreshing blue ocean can be admired from the guest room windows. One can also enjoy the hundreds of islands at Dadohae (which literally means ‘a sea with many islands') Haesang National Park. The pension offers a total of 4 guest rooms: Shamu and Pico rooms are located on the first floor, offering quality relaxation and comfort while the Moby Dick and Free Willy rooms on the 2nd floor offer a beautiful wide open view of the Korea’s southern sea. All guest rooms have a terrace where you can enjoy the breathtaking view of the ocean, and are all well equipped with wireless internet, TV, fridge, and cooking equipment. Tourist attractions located nearby include Seolheulsan Mountain, which has a gorgeous view of the sunset and sunrise, and Sacheon Beach where you can enjoy a romantic stroll along the shore with your loved ones. The area is also a good place for fishing from the rocks along the shore, which makes this place a perfect destination not just for hiking but also for leisure fishing.


Jeollabuk-do(Jeonju-si)

'Blueboat Hostel Jeonju is one of guesthouses of the 'The Guest House' chain in Busan, Seoul, and Gyeongju. Blueboat Hostel Jeonju opened in April 2016 in Gyeongwon-dong, Jeonju-si, which is only 10 minutes away from Gyeonggijeon Shrine on foot. A number of other popular tourist destinations including Jeonju Hanok Village, Jeongdong Cathedral, and Nammun Market are also within walking distance. The hostel has seven guestrooms furnished with steel frame beds. The bathrooms and kitchen are shared among the guests, and there is a television in the kitchen. The rooms have a trendy interior design because it's mostly visited by young tourists. The guesthouse is just like one of those you can find in other countries, except cleaner.


Gyeongsangbuk-do(Andong-si)

Ogyeonjeongsa House was established by Ryu Seong-yong (pen-name: Seoae, 1542-1607), a minister of Joseon, with the help of Buddhist monk Tanhong, as a place to study and educate his students. After building Wonjijeongsa House, Ryu wanted to build another house at the foot of Buyongdae Cliff amid a tranquil environment away from the village, but due to his financial situation he was unable to complete the building by himself. Then, the monk Tanhong helped him build Ogyeonjeongsa House, which took ten years (1576 to 1586) to complete, when Ryu was 45 years old. Later, Ryu Seong-yong was able to share warmth with his brother (Gyeomam), who lived in nearby Gyeomamjeongsa House. Ryu later lost his house in Hahoe in the great flood of the Nakdonggang River in 1605, and retired to Ogyeongjeongsa House where he wrote Jingbirok (The Book of Correction, National Treasure 132), a memoir of the Imjin War (Japanese Invasion of Korea in 1592). The house’s guestrooms include Sesimjae (meaning ‘having a mind to this place to achieve at least one in ten thousand things,’ inspired by the I Ching or The Book of Changes), which was used by Ryu as a schoolhouse and has two small rooms between the maru gamheonrok (wooden floor, meaning ‘looking up at the sky and down at the blue water,’ inspired by Wang Xizhi’s poetic diction); Wonlakjae (meaning ‘waiting for a friend’s visit,’ inspired by the Analects of Confucius), in which Ryu himself resided and wrote Jingbirok; and the maru aeoheon (meaning ‘I also love my hut,’ taken from a poem by Chinese poet Tao Yuanming), which measures two kan (a unit of measurement referring to the distance between two columns).