Jung said when he lived in Pyongyang, most elevators worked just twice a day, during peak commuting hours from 6 am to 8 am, and the same timing in the evening. To ensure the new highrise apartments are popular, North Korea will have to further improve electricity and water supplies, and overcome worries about the quality of construction, he added.
Windows had only frames and water taps, though installed, were not working, but the recently completed luxury homes come complete with furniture and utensils. Lee Sang-yong, the editor in chief of Daily NK, a Seoul-based website that reports on North Korea, said his sources reported that the apartments for regular people were not ready to live in. That has brought a rash of small items of consumer electronics, but cannot power amenities such as elevators and water supply. Many have turned to individual solar panels for the spells without power. The power supply improved significantly under Kim, spawning some new night life opportunities, but North Korea still grapples with shortages and sometimes shoddy infrastructure. They were low-rise buildings, each only a few floors tall.
On Thursday state media showed Kim inaugurating another housing cluster, this time for members of the elite, including a famous TV anchor. Workers “guaranteed the quality of construction” and the new apartments and other buildings meant for use in education, public health and welfare services would further help make the capital a “people first” city, state news agency KCNA said. On Wednesday, state media said the first 10,000 new apartments had been completed in Pyongyang, from a target of 50,000, and touted the speed of their completion, including the 80-floor skyscraper.
Its economy has been hammered by self-imposed border closures against Covid-19, natural disasters, and international sanctions for its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes, which the United States says draw limited resources away from meeting people’s needs.
He has vowed to improve construction quality and build tens of thousands of new apartments. North Korea assigns housing, with buying and selling of homes or apartments technically illegal in the socialist state.īut experts say the practice has become common, dabbled in mostly by those who benefited from the spread of private markets under Kim. “It’s to show how much their construction skills have improved, rather than considering residents’ preferences,” said the university student. In the North, he lived on the third floor of a 13-storey building that lacked an elevator, while a friend who lived on the 28th floor of a 40-storey block had never used the elevator because it was not working, Jung said.Īsked about the new 80-floor skyscraper opened this week, Jung said he thought Kim was just showing off. “In North Korea, the poor live in penthouses rather than the rich, because lifts are often not working properly, and they cannot pump up water due to the low pressure,” said Jung Si-woo, a 31-year-old who defected to neighbouring South Korea in 2017. Leader Kim Jong Un keeps building outwardly glamorous high-rise apartment buildings in the capital, Pyongyang, with the latest being an 80-storey skyscraper completed this week.īut defectors and other North Koreans say that unreliable elevators and electricity, poor water supply, and concerns about workmanship mean that historically few people have wanted to live near the top of such structures.
SEOUL: For people in many countries, living in a penthouse is the dream.