Busan Day 3: F1963, Milmyeon, Jeonpo Photo Booths & Tteokbokki
Busan in May, Day Three: Cold Noodles, Photo Booths, and a Walk Through Hyundai
Day 3 in Busan had no grand plan—just cravings, curiosity, and rain-driven spontaneity. Somehow, it became my favourite day.
Jump to: Hyundai F1963 · Seomyeon Milmyeon · Fruto Fruta · Jeonpo-dong Café Street · Dalmaji-gil & Juhyun Gallery · Halmae Tteokbokki · Day 3 in a sentence
Morning at F1963 — Where Steel Turns into Stories
Waking up late in Busan is risky; queues form fast. We skipped the lines and headed to F1963, a former wire factory reborn as a cultural playground of bookshops, cafés, and exhibitions beneath soaring steel beams.

Inside felt like an industrial memory box: exposed beams and huge halls swapped machinery for cafés and culture. I’ve worked on Hyundai’s EV projects, so finding Hyundai Motorstudio Busan here felt full-circle.
For me, there was an extra layer of nostalgia. A few years ago, I worked on Hyundai’s electric car projects and later visited their pop-up in Seongsu, Seoul. That was when I realised Hyundai wasn’t just making cars anymore — they were reshaping themselves as part of design and culture. So walking into Hyundai Motorstudio Busan, tucked inside this old factory, felt like coming full circle.
The exhibition Plastic: Remaking Our World wasn’t a glossy car showcase. Instead, it explored how plastic reshapes our lives — with installations, sculptures, and raw wood-and-metal displays. Thought-provoking, industrial, surprisingly poetic.
- Location: 20 Gurak-ro 123beon-gil, Suyeong-gu, Busan
- Highlights: Hyundai Motorstudio, Yes24 Bookstore, Terarosa Café
- Tip: Parking can be confusing — check maps carefully
Food Break: Seomyeon Milmyeon (서면 밀면) — Busan’s Icy Comfort
Busan’s pride dish, milmyeon, was born when wheat replaced scarce buckwheat after the Korean War. At Seomyeon Milmyeon, a steaming cup of hot broth comes first—then the icy bowl of chewy noodles and tangy, gently sweet stock. Top with beef, cucumber, and half an egg.
I’m a die-hard naengmyeon (냉면) girl, so trying milmyeon was non-negotiable. At Seomyeon Milmyeon (서면 밀면), the process began with a steaming cup of hot broth to warm the stomach — a small, comforting ritual before the main event. Then came the icy bowl: chewy wheat noodles in tangy, gently sweet broth, topped with beef, cucumber, and half a boiled egg.
Add vinegar and mustard (the local move), and suddenly it all makes sense — refreshing yet full, sharp but soothing. Was it love? Yes. But I’ll confess… my heart still beats fastest for tteokbokki.
- Location: 25 Seojeon-ro, Busanjin District, Busan
- Price: ≈ ₩7,000–₩8,000 (dumplings extra)
- Tip: Go off-peak; add vinegar + mustard like a local
Dessert Stop: Fruto Fruta (프루토 프루타)
Because one bowl of noodles isn’t enough, we drifted to Fruto Fruta—a dessert spot locals whisper about. Everything leans seasonal and fruit-forward: delicate shortcakes, glossy tarts, parfaits so photogenic you pause before diving in. Sweet, bright, and the perfect counterpoint to salty, tangy milmyeon.
- Location: 28 Jeonpo-daero 224beon-gil, Busanjin District, Busan
- Vibe: Seasonal fruit desserts, minimalist display, café seating
- Tip: Popular on weekends; arrive early or expect a short queue
Afternoon Fun: Jeonpo-dong Café Street & Themed Photo Booths
Jeonpo-dong Café Street is messy in the best way—indie cafés, boutiques, murals, and tucked-away surprises.
One memorable stop was Café Goof. Vintage LPs lined the walls, the lighting was moody, and the menu ran from oat coffee to cocktails. It’s the kind of place you could come alone with a book, or with friends for late-night conversations. The vibe was Busan-meets-Brooklyn, if that makes sense.
Not far away, the photo booths lured us in. And not the plain subway kind — these were full studios with themed sets: bunker-style rooms, neon-lit corners, retro vibes. The three of us squeezed into a booth, fumbled our poses, and by the third flash were laughing so hard we could barely keep still.
The best part? After your photo strips print, you also get a QR code linking to a video of the whole session. Watching ourselves shuffle positions, burst into giggles, and try again was somehow funnier than the actual photos.
- Location: 92 Dongcheon-ro, Busanjin District, Busan
- Don’t miss: Indie cafés, boutique shops, Café Goof (vinyl + cocktails)
- Fun extra: 4-cut photo booths (≈ ₩4,000–₩5,000; many open late/24h)
Detour: Dalmaji-gil & Juhyun Gallery (조현화랑)
Ending with a Classic — Namcheon Halmae Tteokbokki (Busan Station)
Before heading back to Seoul, we made one last stop: Namcheon Halmae Tteokbokki (남천할매떡볶이) by Busan Station. Running since 1983, it’s famous for thick garae-tteok rice cakes simmered in a deep red sauce that’s spicy but never punishing.
It wasn’t fancy — small tables, red-stained aprons — but it was perfect. Chewy rice cakes, a sauce that sticks to your lips, and a nostalgia that tastes like Busan itself. For me, tteokbokki will always be soul food — messy, comforting, and the perfect goodbye.
- Location: Floor 2, Busan Station — 6 min walk from Choryang Station (Line 1) — 20 min walk from Busan Port
- Menu: Tteokbokki (≈ ₩5,500), cheese option, kimbap, ramyeon sets
- Hours: 08:00–20:30
Day 3, in a Sentence
Steel beams, icy noodles, fruity desserts, vinyl cafés, photo-booth giggles, avant-garde art, and nostalgic tteokbokki — Busan’s inland soul surprised me the most.
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