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※This video is part of the March 28, 2018 broadcast of <Extreme Jobs - Living in a Hanok, Modern Hanok and Mobile Hanok>. A modern hanok that preserves the strengths of the old while making up for its weaknesses. Even a mobile hanok that can be delivered to your desired location~ A site where people sweat and tears to create a new hanok! And a factory that operates 24 hours a day to produce the best hanok materials, roof tiles and yellow clay bricks! Extreme Jobs takes a look! Construction is in full swing on several hanoks in Buyeo-gun, Chungcheongnam-do. The average hanok construction period is one year! However, the construction is being done using a method that has shortened that period to just two months. A hanok built with factory-produced walls and pre-fabricated sleepers brought in. Although the construction period has been shortened, the process of building a hanok is by no means easy. From the framing work that involves handling hundreds of tons of wood, to the dangerous work of laying tiles on the roof, to the plastering work that involves scooping up hundreds of kilograms of yellow clay and applying it to the walls - none of the processes are easy. Nevertheless, we meet people who are making modern hanok today with the pride of continuing our tradition. People who make mobile hanoks that are small in size but no different from traditional hanoks inside and out! A factory located in Icheon, Gyeonggi-do makes hanoks that are about 6 pyeong (approximately 19.5 square meters) in size, with sinks and toilets, so that there is no inconvenience in daily life. What's more, this hanok, which even has a jjimjilbang function, is even more appealing because it can be delivered directly to the location of the customer's choice! This mobile hanok has made various efforts to make up for the shortcoming of hanoks, which are weak to the cold, by adding modern insulation and making them lighter! For health reasons, they apply a three-layer yellow clay plaster inside and out, and finish it with a natural glue made from seaweed boiled for 24 hours. Both modern and mobile hanoks use factory-made roof tiles and yellow clay bricks. Unlike in the past, the number of specialized factories that make hanok materials, from walls to tiles, has increased. One of them. A factory in Goryeong, Gyeongsangbuk-do, which accounts for more than 50% of the roof tiles produced in Korea. The workers who endure high-temperature drying work that is no different from a sauna and are proud of making traditional roof tiles are proud even today! Some have been working silently in the same place for over 30 years. The workers at the yellow clay brick factory located in Seongju, Gyeongsangbuk-do also endure their difficult daily lives with the pride of making the best products while making bricks in front of the brick-making machine, which is extremely dangerous. Let’s meet the people who are working hard to make eco-friendly yellow clay bricks using yellow clay and water collected directly from Gayasan Mountain. ✔ Program name: Extreme Job - Living in a Hanok 'Modern Hanok and Mobile Home' ✔ Broadcast date: 2018.03.28 #GolladyeonDocumentary #ExtremeJob #Hanok #Architecture #House #Apartment #Documentary