PLIC Studio · Case Study 03 · Seoul Mobility

The decision question — where, and when, do people converge?
Retail timing · facility siting · headway optimization all hinge on hourly demand.

Seoul's day,
6.6 million trips.

We read the city through the flow of time, not by district area or totals. Using Seoul Metro's hourly boarding/alighting open data, we traced the commuter tide — sucked in by morning, poured back out by evening.

6.6M average daily boardings/alightings (Lines 1–8)
Seoul Metro "2024 Transport Statistics" · 2,417.52 million riders annually
Gangnam Station hourly flow — the asymmetry of the commute
Boarding (outflow) Alighting (inflow)
08–09h Morning
Boarding
61,338
Alighting
29,929
09–10h Morning peak
Boarding
55,593
Alighting
313,737
18–19h Evening peak
Boarding
208,495
Alighting
102,095
In the morning, alighting (inflow) explodes; by evening, boarding (outflow) flips it. Gangnam is the same station running in opposite directions depending on the hour.
Source: Seoul Open Data Plaza "Subway boarding/alighting by line, station, and hour" (OA-12252) · Gangnam Station · May 2026 monthly aggregate (not a daily average) · KOGL Type 1 (Korea Open Government License — attribution; commercial use & modification permitted)
What the flow reveals

Three things you only see through time

01

The same station runs in opposite directions by the hour

At Gangnam Station, morning alighting (09–10h) explodes into the 310,000 range, then the flow flips with evening boarding (18–19h). Viewed along the time axis rather than as a total, a single point shifts from an inflow hub to an outflow hub within a single day — and that is where retail hours, headways, and facility circulation design diverge.

09–10h alighting 313,737 ↔ 18–19h boarding 208,495 (May 2026 monthly aggregate)
02

A three-pole concentration and a 60× weight gap

The busiest station is Jamsil (Line 2) at a daily average of 156,000, followed by Hongik Univ. and Gangnam in a three-pole structure. Meanwhile, Dorimcheon Station on the same Line 2 averages 2,615 a day — a weight gap of roughly 60× between the busiest and the quietest station. Even on the same line, demand at each station lives on an entirely different scale.

Jamsil 156,177 · Hongik Univ. 150,369 · Gangnam 149,757 vs Dorimcheon 2,615 (2024 daily average)
03

A single Line 2 carries more than five regional cities' subways combined

Line 2 moves 1.96 million people a day — more than the metro systems of Busan, Daegu, Incheon, Gwangju, and Daejeon combined. The imbalance between lines reveals the real load that area-based averages hide when setting priorities for investment, added trains, and congestion relief.

Line 2: 1,964,128 / day (2024) — single line > five regional cities combined
PLIC Data Methodology

Question → Flow → Decision.

01 · FRAMING

Decision framing

We frame "when and where do people converge?" through the lenses of retail timing, facility siting, and headway/congestion relief.

02 · BUILD

Analysis build

We refine OA-12252 hourly boarding/alighting data and visualize it as a station network, a 24-hour heatmap, and commuter directional flows.

03 · DELIVER

Deliver & measure

We hand over an hourly-demand report plus a reproducible pipeline that automatically reflects the monthly data refresh.

Data & License

Real public data · sources cited

📊 Dataset

  • Seoul Metro boarding/alighting by line, station, and hour (dataset ID: OA-12252)
  • Provided by: Seoul Metropolitan Government, Transportation Office · source transit-card settlement system · refreshed for the prior month on the 5th of each month
  • License: KOGL Type 1 (Korea Open Government License — attribution; commercial use & modification permitted)
  • Access: Open API (JSON/XML) + free CSV download · time series from 2015 to present
  • Cross-referenced with daily-average and line statistics from Seoul Metro "2024 Transport Statistics" (published 2025.02.19)
Source: Seoul Open Data Plaza, "Seoul Metro boarding/alighting by line, station, and hour" (OA-12252), updated 2026.06. KOGL Type 1 (Korea Open Government License). https://data.seoul.go.kr · line/station daily averages: Seoul Metro "2024 Transport Statistics" (2025.02.19).

How to read these figures — The Gangnam Station hourly figures in the hero chart are a monthly aggregate (not a daily average) from OA-12252 (May 2026). Line and station rankings are based on Seoul Metro's published daily averages. To avoid mixing daily-average and monthly-aggregate bases, each chart states its unit. Figures are based on Lines 1–8 (operated by Seoul Metro); Line 9, KORAIL, and Airport Railroad segments are supplemented with separate datasets. This case study is for sales-asset demonstration purposes.

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