[Asia Economy (Daejeon) Reporter Jeong Il-woong] Daejeon City announced on the 21st that it has lifted development restrictions on 60 sites totaling 72,984.9㎡ in the greenbelt areas, including isolated lands, boundary-crossing lands, and small discontinuous lands.


Previously, since April 2020, the city conducted a comprehensive survey of the entire greenbelt area. Based on this, it consulted with related agencies such as the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, gathered residents' opinions, and underwent review by the Urban Planning Committee to finally lift the development restrictions on these lands.


The targeted lands include ▲7 isolated lands totaling 60,265㎡ ▲49 boundary-crossing lands totaling 8,609㎡ ▲2 small discontinuous lands totaling 1,281㎡ ▲and 2 omitted lands in the priority lifting district for collective settlements totaling 2,829.9㎡.


Isolated lands refer to lands of 30,000㎡ or less that are adjacent to areas outside the greenbelt but are separated by roads, railways, or rivers. Boundary-crossing lands are lands under 1,000㎡ through which the greenbelt boundary line passes. Small discontinuous lands refer to lands of 1,000㎡ or less where the greenbelt boundary line is discontinuously formed due to boundary-crossing lands.



Jung Hae-gyo, Director of the City’s Urban Housing Bureau, said, “While the greenbelt has advantages such as preserving the environment around the city, it also causes disadvantages like restrictions on private property rights. The city will systematically manage the greenbelt through continuous consultation with the Ministry of Land to preserve the urban environment, promote balanced urban development, and resolve residents’ inconveniences.”


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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