Reading the on-site signs
What's worth reading slowly on-site isn't the check-in board, but the official plates and maps explaining 'why this rock is here'.
The readings below are based on Daewangam, bridge and lighthouse introductions, legend notes and coastal guides set by Ulsan Metropolitan City and Dong-gu, turning visible-but-unread info into understandable English science.
PLAQUEPark history plate
Daewangam Park & the East Sea
대왕암공원 연혁
Daewangam Park history
📍 On-site location · Park main entrance
Such plates usually give the key background: Daewangam as an East-Sea coastal park and its link to the Silla court's twin guardian-dragon legend. Reading them is lesson one in understanding this coastal landmark.
PLAQUEBridge guide (KO/EN)
303 m sea suspension bridge
출렁다리 안내
Bridge guide
📍 On-site location · Bridge entrance
Plates stress Daewangam's status as a sea-bridge landmark and remind visitors: half its charm is the open sea view, half the real East-Sea waves below. They explain clearly 'why a suspension bridge'.
PLAQUEUlgi Lighthouse guide
Among Korea's earliest lighthouses
울기등대 안내
Ulgi Lighthouse guide
📍 On-site location · Lighthouse viewing area
The map explains 'why this is a navigation hub'. The Ulgi Lighthouse uses the East-Sea cliff as an early route marker; with the bridge, Daewangam's design logic is clear — coastal defence and public recreation coexist.
PLAQUETwin guardian-dragon marker
The queen consort & the female guardian dragon
호국룡 안내
Guardian dragon legend
📍 On-site location · Toward Daewangam islet
Set by Dong-gu, Ulsan, marking Daewangam's local link to the queen consort as the female guardian dragon, while echoing the wider Munmu-at-sea motif. It reminds every visitor: this rock connects one of Korea's most moving coastal-defence legends with one of its clearest sea views.