Country for PR: Hong Kong
Contributor: PR Newswire Asia (Hong Kong)
Thursday, July 11 2019 - 19:00
AsiaNet
Suncheon, Korea's ecological capital, aims to draw 10 million tourists this year
SUNCHEON, South Korea, July 11, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Suncheon City Hall has launched a "Visit Suncheon Year" campaign this year in 
Suncheon, a southwestern city known as South Korea's center of ecology, aiming 
to attract 10 million tourists.

Photo - https://photos.prnasia.com/prnh/20190711/2522023-1-a 
This photo provided by Suncheon City Hall shows the Suncheon Bay Wetland 
Reserve.
 
Photo - https://photos.prnasia.com/prnh/20190711/2522023-1-b 
This photo provided by Suncheon City Hall shows Suncheon Bay National Garden.
 
Photo - https://photos.prnasia.com/prnh/20190711/2522023-1-c 
This photo provided by Suncheon City Hall shows Naganeupseong Folk Village.

In the first half of this year, 4.47 million people visited Suncheon, about 415 
kilometers south of Seoul, while Suncheon Bay National Garden, the first of its 
kind and the largest artificial garden in Korea, drew about 3 million visitors 
by July 3 this year.

Suncheon, located in South Jeolla Province, is known for the Suncheon Bay 
Wetland Reserve and other rich ecological reserves and traditional cultural 
assets, including Seonam Temple.

A variety of food produced from the clean area is expected to add to the 
pleasure of visiting Suncheon, municipal officials said, forecasting further 
growth in tourist arrivals in the second half. The growing number of tourists 
is expected to further elevate Suncheon's status as a global ecological hub and 
South Korea's ecological capital.

Suncheon gained international fame in 2006 when Suncheon Bay, a coastal wetland 
featuring wide tideland, fields of reeds, salt swamps and habitat for migratory 
birds, became the first Korean coastal wetland to be included in the Ramsar 
list of protected wetlands.

In 2018, the entire city, including Suncheon Bay and Suncheon Bay Ecological 
Park, was designated as a biosphere reserve by UNESCO.

Back in the 1990s, Suncheon Bay was an abandoned wetland where the Dongcheon 
estuary featuring vast reed fields and a variety of wetland organisms and 
animals was located.

The bay drew public attention in 1993 when a private developer's project to 
extract marine aggregates became known.

The project was halted due to objections from citizens and environmental 
activists wanting to preserve the bay's reed fields. Following an ecological 
survey in 1996, the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries designated 
Suncheon Bay as a wetland preserve in 2003.

The hooded crane, one of the most endangered species in Korea and 
state-designated natural monument No. 228, was first spotted in Suncheon Bay in 
1996, and as many as 2,176 hooded cranes visited the area last year alone.

With Suncheon Bay growing popular as an ecotourism destination, tourists have 
flocked there in increasing numbers.

The city hosted the Suncheon Bay Garden Expo and created Suncheon Bay National 
Garden in order to better preserve the Suncheon Bay Wetland Reserve.

Government heads of 18 areas in seven countries where Ramsar sites are located 
plan to hold a global conference in Suncheon from Oct. 23-25.

Seonam Temple on Mount Jogye in Suncheon was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage 
site in June last year. The temple is known for Seungseon Bridge, which is 
designated as National Treasure No. 400 and is said to be Korea's most 
beautiful arched stone bridge.

Naganeupseong Folk Village, designated historical site No. 302, is a 
well-preserved town castle of the Joseon Dynasty, featuring straw roof houses 
and daily dwellings indigenous to the southern area with kitchen areas, clay 
rooms and Korean-style verandas.

SOURCE  Suncheon City Hall
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