Starbucks has opened a cafe atop a lookout point on the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), allowing curious patrons to sip pumpkin spice lattes while gazing into the nuclear-armed North.
The cafe, which opened on Friday, is located in the Aegibong Peace Ecopark in Gimpo city, about 32km north of Seoul, South Korea. From its terrace, visitors can look across a section of the Han River that is considered neutral waters and into the North Korean town of Kaephung, just over a kilometer away.
On a clear day, Reuters reported, visitors can use telescopes to observe North Korean villagers going about their day across the world’s most heavily militarized border.
The Korean War was halted by an armistice agreement in 1953, but never formally ended. The armistice left the Korean Peninsula divided along the 38th parallel, with the communist North and capitalist South separated by the 4km-wide DMZ. Both sides maintain warrens of fortifications and lookout posts along the DMZ, and North Korea is believed to have more than 10,000 artillery pieces dug in along its side of the border, including in the mountains behind Kaephung.