Seoul’s semi-basement apartments to be improved after grim depiction in ‘Parasite’
The Seoul City government said it will financially support 1,500 households living in semi-basement apartments like the one depicted in the Oscar-winning film Parasite, to improve their living conditions.
Together with the Korea Energy Foundation, the Seoul Metropolitan Government will offer up to 3.2 million South Korea won per household to enhance heating systems, replace floors, and install air conditioners, dehumidifiers, ventilators, windows and fire alarms.
A semi-basement apartment is an affordable choice for urban dwellers in South Korea's Seoul. Some 78 percent of those living in such apartments are from the bottom 30 percent income bracket, according to the municipality.
There were about 383,000 semi-basement apartments in South Korea as of 2015, with 59.5 percent of them in the capital.
As portrayed in Korean director Bong Joon-ho's film Parasite, apartments like this tend to be cramped, damp and smelly due to a lack of sunlight and ventilation, especially when the city gets flooded in summer.
As part of the city's ongoing project to repair old apartments, semi-basement apartments will be given priority in financial support from the municipality and the foundation.
Those who earn less than 60 percent of the median income for a Korean household can submit applications starting in March through community centers and district offices in Seoul, with the range of recipients to be expanded each year.
Copyright: The Korea Herald/Asia News Network (ANN)
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