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April 25 House of Culture

April 25 House of Culture
Palais des congrès Pyongyang.jpg
April 25 House of Culture decorated for the 7th Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea
April 25 House of Culture is located in Pyongyang
April 25 House of Culture
April 25 House of Culture
Former names February 8 House of Culture
Congress Hall
Location Pipha Street, Moranbong District, Pyongyang, North Korea
Coordinates 39°3′29″N 125°44′57″E / 39.05806°N 125.74917°E / 39.05806; 125.74917Coordinates: 39°3′29″N 125°44′57″E / 39.05806°N 125.74917°E / 39.05806; 125.74917
Type Culture venue
Construction
Broke ground April 1974
Opened 7 October 1975 (1975-10-07)
April 25 House of Culture
Chosŏn'gŭl 4.25 문화회관
Hancha 4・25文化会館
Revised Romanization 4.25 munhwahoegwan

The April 25 House of Culture is a theatre located in Pyongyang, North Korea. It was built in 1974-1975 to provide a venue for military education, and was originally called the February 8 House of Culture. It is located on Pipha Street in the Moranbong District of Pyongyang. The classically colonnaded building is considered one of the best examples of 1970s socialist monumentality in Pyongyang, and hence in Korea, the other being the visually similar Mansudae Art Theatre.

It has been the location of many historic events, from both the 6th and 7th congresses of the Korean Workers' Party, to the historic meeting of Kim Jong-il with the president of South Korea, Roh Moo-hyun, in 2007.

A 12.4 hectares (31 acres) site was cleared and actual construction on the theatre building was begun in April 1974. The building is 105 metres (344 ft) wide across the front, 176 metres (577 ft) deep, and rises to a height of almost 50 metres (164 ft). It contains two large theatres with 6,000 seats and 1,100 seats respectively with a cinema theatre of 600 seats. Its over 80,000 square metres (861,113 sq ft) of floor space provide for some 600 other rooms in support of the theatres. The building opened on 7 October 1975.

The building as proposed was originally named the February 8 House of Culture after the date of the founding of the Korean People's Army (KPA). It was opened under this name and the 6th Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea was held there on 10 to 14 October 1980, under this name. After the congress the building was sometimes referred to as Congress Hall; however, subsequently the name was changed to the April 25 House of Culture, the founding date of the resistance army against the Japanese, in order to reflect the historical connection, and the continuity, with the KPA. North Korea's Military Foundation Day had been changed earlier, in 1978, from 9 February to 25 April.


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