Peeling Back Pavement to Expose Watery Havens
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/17/world/asia/17daylight.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss Image via Wikipedia Peeling Back Pavement to Expose Watery Havens By ANDREW C. REVKIN SEOUL, South Korea — For half a century, a dark tunnel of crumbling concrete encased more than three miles of a placid stream bisecting this bustling city. The waterway had been a centerpiece of Seoul since a king of the Choson Dynasty selected the new capital 600 years ago, enticed by the graceful meandering of the stream and its 23 tributaries. But in the industrial era after the Korean War , the stream, by then a rank open sewer, was entombed by pavement and forgotten beneath a lacework of elevated expressways as the city’s population swelled toward 10 million. Today, after a $384 million recovery project, the stream, called Cheonggyecheon , is liberated from its dank sheath and burbles between reedy banks. Picnickers cool their bare feet in its filtered water, and carp swim in its tranquil pools