Photos of the LTG villa

All right, I’m a little too tired tonight to do much writing, so let me whet your appetite with some photos of my little Korean homestead…..

Ok, I won’t accuse the Koreans of engaging in hyperbole, I’ll be kind and say something was lost in the translation. My villa is very nice and comfortable. A clean well-lighted place. However, it is not a Royal Palace (saw one of those in Istanbul).

My street. I really hate when I meet oncoming traffic. It is not quite wide enough for two cars.

The likely scene of my ultimate demise. This intersection has no signal. I need to turn left here to go to work. Cars come flying through. I almost got broadsided Saturday. Of course, my alternative is walking, and it is not a bad option. Except, see those stairs? Well, I should be in good shape (or dead) soon.

Ok, the one thing this place does not have that I really wanted was a view. This is what I settled for….

You can kinda sorta see the Seoul skyline from my balcony, but there is a good view from the rooftop. And the rooftop is set up for cookouts and parties. I’ll get some shots from up there when it warms up a tad.

Let’s go inside….

The entrance foyer. I have adopted the Korean custom of not wearing shoes in the house, hence the slippers….

The living room….


Dining area….


The kitchen….

Now this is pretty cool. It’s a washer/dryer combo and it’s in the kitchen. Used it tonight and it worked like a charm. Very quiet. And small. Took 3 loads to do my meager belongings (well, I had a bath towel and two pair of jeans that made a full load, then the rest of the darks and then the whites). Notice how the landlord put English labels under the Hangul. Good thing too. I did not use the dryer. Landlord says it takes a very long time and since the military housing folks lend appliances, they sent me over this nice big brand-new American Whirlpool dryer….


Which is so convienently [not] located in an alcove on my balcony. Next to the built-in vacuum system which I have already put to work. It’s great!

Ok, on with the tour….

The hallway which leads to….

The guest bedroom and my office….

and a bathroom.

Then on to the master bedroom suite….

This bed is the damnest thing. Queen sheets are too small, King are too large. Go figure.

I have lots of closet space.


And a great master bath. I have not used that big jacuzzi tub yet, but the shower is the best one I have ever had the pleasure to utilize. The six jets of hot water hit all the right places. I spend WAY too much time in there.


Along the back of the villa is this long narrow room. I saw these in a lot of the Korean houses I looked at. I still do not understand the purpose or function. I am using it as a little patio (it is accessable from my office). I guess it would be a good place for plants or something.

The view from the “patio” also pretty much sucks, but I do live near a mosque and you can see the tower from there.

And finally, especially for EuroYank who requested more photos of Korean women, I offer the three sisters who run Sweet Caroline, a bar I have been known to frequent. Left to Right are Mi-Soon, Tami, and Sister.

All right, it’s late and I’m off to bed. I will endeavor to post some news from here tomorrow.

10 thoughts on “Photos of the LTG villa

  1. Great pics John. Just remember to run the jacuzzi every couple of days. When we went on our cruise, we tried using the one in our room and all sorts of “gunk” came out of the jets.

  2. John: Great photos. You probably should walk, looking at those streets. Maybe if you establish a standard protocol (hey, you’re in the Army, right?) — temp a minimum of x, you walk, below that you drive. Do you want to factor in the wind chill and amount of time available (i.e., did you cut that shower time slightly so you could have enough time to walk? :mrgreen: )? There are probably all sorts of considerations to factor in. But looking at those streets, hmmm. Well, you said you need to walk more….. (BTW, I agree with Dick’s note re jacuzzi — gunk includes bacteria 😥 , so you may want to run it daily for a little bit, even if you’re not using it.) Anyhow, congrats on the new digs.

  3. Thanks for the tips, Susan and Dick. Miss you guys!

    It has actually been my plan to walk to work most of the time. A) I really, really need the exercise and B) driving here is a real pain in the rear on all kinds of levels. For example, you are driving along in the left lane. Someone ahead stops in the right lane, and all the cars in the right lane just move over into the left lane. Those of us in the left lane either cross the center line, or “share” the lane with the interlopers. These people have no fear. I am more comfortable with a couple of feet between me and the car beside me, these folks drive with a couple of inches (or less) between mirrors and door handles. Well anyway, it’s a challenge.

  4. Everytime I am in Arlington cars move into my lane – that is nothing new.

    The entertainment center and kitchen are kinda Ikia-ish…nifty.

    John, at that intersection – it looks like the stairs lead directly into the street and not a sidewalk. If that’s so you may want to avoid walking, at least the car would provide some kind of barrier.

  5. Not to worry Carol. There are things I get at home that are unavailable to me here. 😀

  6. So glad you are back….missed your blogs so much…..Pics are great…..I think you should walk….street looks awful….Be careful….Did you get my email?Take care,,,Mom

  7. John … thanks for honoring my request for more Korean women pics, but I prefer the “Teach Me All I Need To Know Look.” These are nice, but they look like they know as much as I do.

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