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Giant flagpole, 'inextinguishable flame' slated for Gwanghwamun veterans memorial The 100-meter-high national flagpole to be constructed at Gwanghwamun Square in central Seoul by 2026 in a rendered image provided by the city government on Tuesday. [SEOUL METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT] Gwanghwamun Square in central Seoul will host a new national symbol: a 100 meter (328 feet) high national flagpole. A brazier holding an “inextinguishable flame” symbolizing "eternal patriotism" will also be displayed in the area.

Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon on Tuesday announced the plan for the project during a meeting with seven war veterans, which was held to commemorate the 74th anniversary of the 1950-53 Korean War. The Seoul mayor said the city decided to create a space to commemorate the sacrifices of war veterans and pledged to make it an area where the public will feel pride. The flagpole will be topped with the Taegeukgi.



It will feature a 15-meter-high media facade on the lower part and beams that will make it look like a radiating pillar. The Taegeukgi represents the history of Korea, including the March 1 Independence Movement in 1919, which called for independence from Imperial Japan during its colonial rule. The national flagpole and a brazier called "inextinguishable flame" to be constructed at Gwanghwamun Square in central Seoul by 2026 in a rendered image provided by the city government on Tuesday.

The lower part of the flagpole features a 15-meter-high media facade. [SEOUL METROPOLIT.

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