
Korea's salt-air second city, where mountain temples back onto neon beaches and a hillside art village looks out over the same blue water the fish market opens to at dawn. Here's how we'd actually spend the days.
Korea's coastal city — beaches, mountains, hot springs and film.
Korea's second city wears its coastline like a banner. By day, the high-rises of Haeundae Beach throw long shadows over the sand; by night, the suspension lights of Gwangalli ripple across the water while the smell of grilled seafood drifts in from the boardwalk. Busan moves at the pace of the tide — unhurried, a little salt-worn, and impossibly photogenic.
Climb the pastel hillside of Gamcheon Culture Village, soak away an afternoon in the mineral baths of the Dongnae hot springs, then trade the bustle for the cedar-scented quiet of Beomeosa, a 1,300-year-old mountain temple. This is the page where every Busan thread — what to do, where to eat, sleep, and shop — comes together in one place.