BTS May Open March 21 Comeback Show With Walk on Restored Gwanghwamun Royal Route

By KI SU JEONG Posted : February 4, 2026, 08:03 Updated : February 4, 2026, 08:03
The Gwanghwamun Woldae is a broad stone platform like those seen at major ceremonial halls such as Geunjeongjeon at Gyeongbokgung Palace and the main hall at Jongmyo Shrine. The platform in front of Gwanghwamun is believed to have been a place where the king met and communicated with the public during major state events, but it disappeared during the Japanese colonial period. Photo by Yoo Dae Gil
The Gwanghwamun Woldae is a broad stone platform like those seen at major ceremonial halls such as Geunjeongjeon at Gyeongbokgung Palace and the main hall at Jongmyo Shrine. The platform in front of Gwanghwamun is believed to have been a place where the king met and communicated with the public during major state events, but it disappeared during the Japanese colonial period. [Photo by Yoo Dae Gil dbeorlf123@ajunews.com]

BTS are expected to step onto the restored Gwanghwamun Woldae — a ceremonial platform returned to its original form after 100 years — as part of their first full-group return in three years and nine months.
The group are set to stage “BTS Comeback Live: Arirang,” a performance marking the release of their fifth full-length album, at 8:00 p.m. on March 21 at Gwanghwamun Square in Seoul.
Organizers are reviewing a plan for the members to march from Geunjeongmun Gate at Gyeongbokgung Palace, passing Heungnyemun and Gwanghwamun, and ending at the Woldae.
The Woldae is a wide raised platform in front of a palace’s main hall and is seen as a symbolic space where the king and the public once interacted. It was damaged by Japan in 1923 and was restored last year, 100 years later.
An industry official said the idea appears intended to portray BTS’ return to fans after lengthy military service as a grand march along the restored “royal route.” The official said that if it goes ahead, it would be remembered as a symbolic moment linking Korean history with today’s K-pop.
The concert is to be livestreamed worldwide to 190 countries on Netflix. The company said it is the first time in its history it will broadcast a solo concert live by a specific artist. Producers who worked on the Super Bowl halftime show have joined the project, and HYBE plans to use elements such as a media facade on the Gwanghwamun wall to heighten the impact of the march.
Safety remains the key issue. The Korea Heritage Service and the Seoul Metropolitan Government have issued conditional approval. BTS’ side must finalize safety measures for the full event, including the march on the Woldae, and pass final review by three weeks before the show. With the performance requiring movement through narrow passages, more advanced crowd-management measures are expected to be needed than usual.



* This article has been translated by AI.
기사 이미지 확대 보기
닫기