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Haeundae LCT The Sharp (Korean: 해운대 엘시티 더샵) is a major urban development project in Jung-dong, Haeundae District, Busan, South Korea.Located in front of Haeundae Beach, it consists of a 411.6 m (1,350 ft), 101-floor supertall landmark tower used as a hotel, and two 85-floor residential skyscrapers.
SK Hub Sky 1: 182 m (597 ft) 49 2006 Dongnae District [75] [76] [77] 30 SK Hub Sky 2: 182 m (597 ft) 49 2006 Dongnae District [75] [78] [79] 32 AID Sea Colony Tower 102: 176 m (577 ft) 53 2013 Haeundae District [80] [81] 32 AID Sea Colony Tower 202: 176 m (577 ft) 53 2014 Haeundae District [82] [83] 32 BI CITY Hotel & Office: 176 m (577 ft) 37 ...
A Ladder to the Sky is a 2018 novel by Irish novelist John Boyne, and his eleventh novel for adults. The plot concerns Maurice Swift, a handsome young writer who schemes, seduces, and plagiarizes his way to literary stardom. The novel received positive reviews from critics, and was shortlisted for Novel of the Year at the 2018 Irish Book Awards ...
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Title page of Book from the Sky, in pseudo-Chinese characters.The characters “天書” do not appear anywhere in the book. A Book from the Sky (simplified Chinese: 天书; traditional Chinese: 天書; pinyin: Tiānshū) is a book produced by Chinese artist Xu Bing in the style of fine editions from the Song and Ming dynasties, but filled entirely with meaningless glyphs designed to resemble ...
North Harbor SKY.V Tower A 77 Busan [372] North Harbor SKY.V Tower B 77 Busan [372] IFC Xi The Sky: 70 2028 Busan: Complex to include multiple buildings Bucheon Media Culture Complex Hotel: 70 2027 Bucheon: Complex to include multiple buildings I-Core City Landmark II: 70 2030 Incheon: Daejeon Station Hanwha U-Link Redevelopment: 69 2025 Daejeon
Bosu Book Street (Korean: 보수동 책방골목; Hanja: 寶水洞 冊房-) is the book street in Bosu-dong, Jung District, Busan, South Korea. Bosu Book Street has a lot of bookstores. Bosu Book Street has a lot of bookstores.
A petition was made in October 2009 by parents, teachers, students and hagwon owners to challenge the government's legislation regarding hagwon closing times in Seoul and Busan. The constitutional court ruled that the laws did not violate the constitution. [23] The restriction was put in place for Seoul and Busan in the summer of 2009.