Its author Philipp Meuser calls it The Illicit Guidebook, and its pages give a unique insight into one of the most fascinating cities you may never visit. We all know of the dark undertones to the elaborate communist architecture that swamps the capital of the “Democratic People’s Republic of Korea” – but that doesn’t change this being an utterly compelling document of architecture and culture in the world’s most isolated country. As Meuser says, “Pyongyang is arguably the world’s best preserved open-air museum of socialist architecture”, and his two volume book – Pyongyang Architectural and Cultural Guide – gives us unprecedented access to that museum.
Whilst the grand Soviet-style public spaces, towers and monuments are breathtaking in their scale and style, there’s also truly fascinating cultural insights – hairdressers and subway cars – that hint at how day to day life may go on behind the country’s curtain of secrecy – the rare glimpses of human life in the images are the most engaging. “At the time of publishing, an unannounced or unaccompanied trip to the North Korean capital is tantamount to an act of espionage, and a carefully monitored group tour is almost the only way of exploring its architectural monuments”, states Meuser – but he’s managed to scratch away at the surface just enough to offer perhaps the most incisive study of Pyongyang culture I’ve ever read.
Pyongyang Architectural and Cultural Guide Philipp Meuser Paperback published March 2012 'Ambitiously designed community buildings, faceless mass housing developments, and a monumental emptiness are the defining features of Pyongyang - a city of three million inhabitants rising from rubble after the Korean War of the 1950s.
Given an extensive resource of images by the Pyongyang Foreign Languages Publishing House – Meuser had to agree to a contract stipulating he publish them without critique. That resource forms Volume 1, whilst in Volume 2 the author delivers a sobering view on this repressive nation. We’ve got a series of exclusive images from the books, and so compelling are they, that we’re spreading them across two posts. Here’s the first…
Grand Monument on Mansu Hill
1972
1972
Mangyongdae Schoolchildren’s Palace
1989
1989
![German cultural guide German cultural guide](/uploads/1/2/5/7/125734771/174453660.jpg)
Waiting room of the women’s hair salon in the
Changgwangsan Health and Recreation Centre.
Changgwangsan Health and Recreation Centre.
(Tall building in the centre)
Construction site of the Ryugyong Hotel after the Orascom Group,
an Egyptian tele-communications and construction company,
undertook to complete the façade in 2010
Construction site of the Ryugyong Hotel after the Orascom Group,
an Egyptian tele-communications and construction company,
undertook to complete the façade in 2010
Grand Monument on Mansu Hill
1972
1972
Monument to the Immortality of President Kim Il Sung
1997
1997
Pyongyang Grand Theatre
1960, modernized 2009
1960, modernized 2009
![German cultural guide German cultural guide](https://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/pictures/2000x2000fit/6/6/5/1275665_02_218.jpg)
Pyongyang Koryo Hotel
1985
1985
Tower of the Juche Idea
1982
1982
Women’s hair salon in the Changgwangsan Health and Recreation Centre,
built in 1981
built in 1981
Pyongyang Architectural and Cultural Guide is published by DOM Publishers and retails at €38.
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