Gallery: North Korea’s Secret Infrastructure
Originally from: INFRASTRUCTURIST.
Gallery: North Korea’s Secret Infrastructure:

Last year, two Austrian tourists managed to enter North Korea by train at a border crossing that has been closed to foreigners since 1994. Lucky for us, they took lots of pictures. Below are a few samples from their extensive documentation of their trip (see the full visual and narrative account here, here and here). They also hit Pyongyang–a city 3 million people that does see a bit of tourist traffic–and took some special photographic interest to the city’s infrastructure, especially trams.
Considering that North Korea is nightmarish dictatorship governed by a lunatic there probably aren’t any lessons to be to taken from it, but: Pyongyang–at least based on the shot below with lots of intact farmland close to the city center–does look remarkably sprawl-free.
The photo at top was taken in the area of the DMZ. The last two shots–at the bottom of the gallery, after the jump–are from the forbidden Tumangan border crossing.
More forbidden-ness below.

Pyongyang. Look, ma! No sprawl!

Pyongyang trams

Tram tracks, under construction

Pyongyang avenue

North Korean transit-themed stamps

A North Korean designed “railbus”

Tumangan border crossing

Tumangan border crossing.
Photos via vienna-pyongyang.blogspot.com
(H/t: Freakonomics)