Cultural heritage sites In Pyeongchang, 16 heritage sites were registered by the South Korean government, and 45 Heritages were registered by the Gangwon Provincial Office. The count of cultural heritage designations is as follows. • Registered by the Nation: 5 National Treasures, 5 Treasures, 1 Historic Site, 3 Natural Monuments, 1 National Folklore Cultural Heritage, 1 Registered Cultural Heritage • Registered by the local government: 29 Tangible Cultural Heritages, 2 Intangible Cultural Heritages, 4 Monuments, 10 Cultural Heritage Materials
Temples Sangwonsa is a temple on
Odaesan Mountain that was originally established as Jinyeowon in 705. Although the
Joseon Dynasty's policy was the prohibition of
Buddhism, it constantly donated to rebuild the temple. In 1401, King
Taejong donated to the construction of Sajaam Hermitage. In 1465, King
Sejo and administrators donated to rebuild the temple. Sejo's son, King
Yejong designated it as a memorial for his father. During the
Third Battle of Seoul, the
United Nations Command ordered that the temple be burned, but a Buddhist monk prevented it. Instead, the Command agreed to burn only the doors of the temple.
Sangwonsa has the following cultural heritage sites: • The
Bell of Sangwonsa (National Treasure No. 36) • Promotion of Virtue for Rebuilding Sangwonsa (National Treasure No. 292) •
Wooden Seated Child Manjusri of Sangwonsa Temple (National Treasure No. 221) • Wooden seated figure of the Manjusri Child's Enshrined Heritages in Sangwonsa (Treasure No. 793) • Wooden seated figure of Manjusri and its Enshrined Heritages in Sangwonsa (Treasure No. 1811) • Wooden sedentary figure of Manjusri's Enshrined Classical Kooks in Sangwonsa (Treasure No. 1812)
Woljeongsa is a temple on
Odaesan Mountain established by
Jajang the monk in 643. After it was established, it was consistently rebuilt. During the
Third Battle of Seoul, 10 buildings were totally destroyed by fire. Tanheo the monk restored Jeokgwangjeon, one of the burnt buildings, in 1964, and Manhwa the monk gradually reconstructed other buildings.
Woljeongsa has the following cultural heritage sites: • Octagonal Nine-story Stone Pagoda of Woljeongsa (National Treasure No. 48-1) • Reliquaries of the Octagonal Nine-story Stone Pagoda of Woljeongsa (Treasure No. 1375) • Stone seated figure of the Bodhisattva in Woljeongsa (National Treasure No. 48-2) • Painting of Three Bodhisattvas originated from Wonju Guryongsa (Treasure No. 1855) (Placed in Wolljeongsa, possessed by Guryongsa) • Clothes of the Buddhist monk Han-am (Registered Cultural Heritage No. 645)
Historic sites The
Pyeongchang Odaesan Historic Archive (
Historic Site No. 34) was one of five archival locations in the latter part of the Joseon Dynasty for the
Annals of the Joseon Dynasty and
Sonwon-kyebo-kiryak.
Festivals • Daegwallyeong Snow Festival :Daegwallyeong Snow Festival began as "Daegwallyeong Winter Snow Festival" in 1992 by Daegwallyeong Ski Club. In 1993, the first festival was formally held. Events of the 1st festival were skiing competition for locals, games of making snowmen, snow sledge competition, and sledge competition. Some games were added to next festivals, such as traditional games and snow car raising. : On 7–22 Feb 2018, 26th festival was held in hwenggye-ri,
Daegwallyeong-myeon as a pre-event of the
2018 Winter Olympics. Events include an exhibition of snow figures, snow sledge competition, international naked marathon, traditional folk performances, and Hwangbyoungsan Mountain hunting game. • Hyoseok Cultural Festival : Pyeongchang is the hometown of
Lee Hyo-seok, a Korean novelist, and this festival is held in Lee Hyo-seok Culture Village, where he grew up.
Museum •
Lee Seung-bok Memorial Hall : The Lee Seung-bok Memorial Hall is located in Nodong-ri,
Yongpyeong-myeon to memorialize
Lee Seung-bok who was a South Korean boy murdered by North Korean commandos in 1968. It was established in 1982, with building a memorial statue for Lee. Lee's house was restored in 2000.
Food Characteristic foods are
buckwheat dishes, grilled
hwangtae, Daegwallyeong
hanwoo,
osambulgogi,
maeuntang, trout
hoe, and wild herbs.
Nature and sports Odaesan Mountain is the home of historical Buddhist temples including
Sangwonsa and
Woljeongsa. It was designated as a national park in 1975. The highest peak, Birobong Peak is high. Two major ski resorts in the county were the home of the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Alpensia ski resort has six slopes for skiing and
snowboarding, with
runs up to long, for beginners and advanced skiers, and an area reserved for snowboarders. The resort is open year-round. Alpensia hosted the majority of the Olympic snow events.
Yongpyong Resort, which has a total of 28 ski slopes, hosted the technical alpine skiing events. Alpensia will be the focus of the 2018
Cultural Olympiad, with a new, purpose-built
concert hall within the resort with an indoor water park. Samyang Ranch is the largest highlands farm in Asia, located in the hills of Daegwallyeong at 850 to 1,470 meters above sea level. It is operated as a
petting zoo and features a pastoral landscape. The ranch is operated by the leading Korean food and dairy company
Samyang Foods, the first company to introduce ramyeon instant noodles into a poverty-ridden South Korea in the 1960s. It is the filming location of the drama
Autumn in My Heart and the movie
''Lover's Concerto''. ==Sport==