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Seonim Bridge

Coordinates: 33°15′06″N 126°25′00″E / 33.251609°N 126.416802°E / 33.251609; 126.416802
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Seonim Bridge

선임교
Coordinates33°15′06″N 126°25′00″E / 33.251609°N 126.416802°E / 33.251609; 126.416802 Edit this at Wikidata
CrossesCheonjeyeon Waterfalls
Characteristics
Total length128 m (420 ft)
Width4 m (13 ft)
Height78 m (256 ft)
History
Construction end1984; 40 years ago (1984)
Construction cost₩400 million
Statistics
Daily trafficPedestrian
TollYes for tourists
Korean name
Hangul
선임교
Hanja
仙臨僑
Revised RomanizationSeonimgyo
McCune–ReischauerSŏnimkyo
Location
Map

Seonim Bridge (Korean선임교; Hanja仙臨僑; RRSeonimgyo; MRSŏnimkyo) is an arch bridge on Jeju Island over Cheonjeyeon Waterfall that has seven nymphs carved on both sides.[1][2] It crosses from east to west over the stream between the second and third tiers of Cheonjeyeon waterfall.[3]

The bridge is also called Seven Nymphs Bridge (Korean칠선녀교; RRChilseonyeogyo).[2] The nymphs symbolize the Korean legend of the descent of seven beautiful nymphs from heaven at night.[1] Seonimgyo Bridge is the first bridge with Ojakgyo (오작교) design in the region.[4] It was completed in 1984, and cost the Korea Tourism Organization about 400 million to construct.[5] There is a fee for tourists who use the bridge.[5] The bridge features 100 guard rails and 34 stone lanterns that light up at night.[4] On the bridge's steel columns, there are 14 nymphs, 7 on each side with each nymph about 20 metres (66 ft) in length.[3] All the nymphs are playing their own musical instruments.[4]

Seonimgyo Bridge

Seonim Bridge is 128 metres (420 ft) in length, 78 metres (256 ft) in height, 4 metres (13 ft) in width, and 230 tonnes (510,000 lb) in weight.[3][5]

Entrance to Seonimgyo Bridge

It is a tourist attraction on Jeju-do.[5] The bridge connects Cheonjeyeon with the Jungmun Tourist Complex,[3][2] and is intended for pedestrian use.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Cecilia Hae-Jin Lee (May 24, 2010). Frommer's South Korea. Frommer's. p. 401. ISBN 978-0-470-59154-3. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c "Cheonjeyeon Falls". Retrieved June 8, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d "Tourism Facilities". Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c "선임교". Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d "건너든 말든 이용료는 내시오". 한라일보. September 4, 2007. Retrieved June 8, 2011.