HOT SPRING – soviet-style POMP
July 13, 2011 1 Comment
“quality” PICKINGS from my DPRK DIARY 11.–21. April 2011
The Ryonggang Hot Spring is located 40 km outside of Nampho. The compound consists of 12 houses. There are no other hotels between Pyongyang and Kaesong.
The Ryonggang Hot Spring resort looks like DDR-design. It is guarded by soldiers with machine guns around the clock. It is closed off to the outside world as well as to those who are inside. Nobody can enter, nobody can leave without permission and guide.
It has been a famous spa of the former Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. The vacation compound in the woods offered complete seclusion where Communist Party Members of the former Soviet Empire, from Ukraine to Kazakhstan, from Poland to Cuba, could enjoy themselves in total privacy.
It has special services like floor heating in the bedroom, a bathtub with hot water from the hot spring for three hours in the afternoon and two hours in the morning…
The reception area was huge, well, that was my impression when I entered the main building. But soon I had to adjust my perception of space in this “otherworldly“ environment.
After dinner we went to the billiard room – it looked like the first class waiting room of a small town railway station. One could still feel the activity of decades ago.
Going to the bar, another – abandoned – enormous empty space brings up the fantasy – I can’t resist it – that, year by year, train loads of vodka and kaviar must have passed through this exclusive resort which served former communist apparatchiks from all over the world.
Pomp in the UDSSR has always been expressed in size and kilos. Oversized constructions carried the nimbus of “Excellence“ and “Quality“.
In that respect, our dining room was of “very high quality“. It was super huge and only the two of us were experiencing the remote and odd luxury in the woods of this once exclusive resort.
Times have changed? I guess they have – in some respect. Nowadays, modern communists expect more comfort.
The game is over. Now we tourists pay for the upkeep.
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