View allAll Photos Tagged Pyongyang
First time foreign amateur runners and Americans were allowed to participate in the Pyongyang Marathon, an IAAF bronze level race.
uritours.com/blog/entry/how-to-register-for-the-pyongyang...
Dried pollack is a very typical beer snack in North Korea. It's traditionally caught and dried during the winters and eaten throughout the year. The insides are stripped in pieces and enjoyed. The eyes are delicacies. And the skin is lightly charred using a cigarette lighter for effect.
A new microbrewing culture has taken Pyongyang on by storm. Find out more on how to taste North Korean beer on our DPRK Beer Tour: uritours.com/tours/entry-tour/north-korea-travel-beer-fis...
April 2012 trip to DPRK, North Korea for the 100th year birthday celebrations for Kim Il Sung - check out my North Korea blog at americaninnorthkorea.com/
This maintenance truck seems to be particularly busy on public holidays, when the less-packed trolley buses can be parked by the roadside, as in this picture.
Seen from the top of the Juche Tower. The monument to the party founding can be seen in the middle of this picture.
Pyongyang Metro has used former German rolling stock from the Berlin U-Bahn. You can still see old German graffiti (on the window).
Of course, Icons of the Leaders are also present in every car of the metro.
The first pizza joint in North Korea - Pyongyang, DPKR.
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/northkorea/499942...
Pyongyang, DPRK.
Access to apartment buildings is always from the back side of the buildings, back streets, or courtyards. Residents gather in the evenings, while children enjoy the dilapidated but omnipresent playgrounds.
humanitybesideus.net/2013/03/10/faces-of-pyongyang-part-2...
(c) humanitybesideus.net. All rights reserved. Do not reuse without explicit authorization.
Pyongyang, DPRK.
Access to apartment buildings is always from the back side of the buildings , back streets, or courtyards. Residents gather in the evenings, while children enjoy the dilapidated but omnipresent playgrounds.
humanitybesideus.net/2013/03/10/faces-of-pyongyang-part-2...
(c) humanitybesideus.net. All rights reserved. Do not reuse without explicit authorization.
The Pyongyang Metro is the metro system in the North Korean capital Pyongyang. It consists of two lines: the Chollima Line, which runs north from Puhŭng Station on the banks of the Taedong River to Pulgŭnbyŏl Station, and the Hyŏksin Line, which runs from Kwangbok Station in the southwest to Ragwŏn Station in the northeast. The two lines intersect at Chŏnu Station.
April 2012 trip to DPRK, North Korea for the 100th year birthday celebrations for Kim Il Sung - check out my North Korea blog at americaninnorthkorea.com/