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News / Life / Travel

Tourists flock to tiny Swiss town

Village’s scenery used in popular ‘Crash Landing on You’

By Seoeun Kim, Bloomberg News
Published: June 24, 2023, 5:29am

The small fishing village of Iseltwald, Switzerland, is home to just about 400 people. On the southern shore of Lake Brienz, it’s long been quiet and uneventful, rarely visited by outsiders — until a popular South Korean TV show put it on the map for global travelers, practically overnight.

Since September 2022, Iseltwald has been hosting massive numbers of Asian tourists, mostly from South Korea and Southeast Asia. The volume of day-trippers has become so intense — sometimes outnumbering locals — that the village launched a double-decker bus service this month to ferry them to the scenic spots they come to see.

That’s thanks to the popular K-drama “Crash Landing on You,” which Nielsen Korea ranks as South Korea’s fourth-most-viewed TV show in history. After it debuted in 2019, a steady international rollout on Netflix Inc. snowballed the show’s audience. The show’s narrative is set in North Korea, where production was not possible; instead, many scenes were shot in Switzerland. A particularly pivotal scene takes place at Lake Brienz, whose stunning turquoise waters, flanked by mountains, are now etched in viewers’ minds.

That scene — a crescendo in the main characters’ relationship that features actor Hyun-bin playing the piano on a pier — has driven such intense tourism that Google Maps now calls it “Crash Landing on You filming location.” It’s become such an icon of romance that visitors use it as a backdrop for proposals, weddings, and engagement photos. Lake Lungern, a 40-minute drive east from Lake Brienz where part of another episode in the series was shot, has also experienced an influx of South Korean tourists.

Getting to either spot takes commitment. Since Lake Brienz is more easily accessible, it’s gotten the lion’s share of attention. Visitors typically fly to Zurich and take a 140-minute train to Interlaken Ost, then ride a bus for 25 minutes to Iseltwald.

On a recent midweek visit, the bus between Interlaken and Iseltwald is filled with Asian tourists toting selfie sticks and tripods. On arrival, each must now pay 5 Swiss francs ($5.50) to go to the edge of the pier to take pictures; the charge was imposed in May in hopes of curbing overtourism. All proceeds go directly to the municipality of Interlaken to help cover infrastructure costs related to the influx of visitors, such as garbage disposal, toilets and signage.

Most visitors (including this writer) stay for only an hour or two. Unlike the huge gains in tourism across Croatia that stemmed from zeal for “Game of Thrones,” or the spike in overnight stays at British countryside estates after “Downton Abbey,” TV tourism here stands to disrupt a pristine place and tiny community without bringing much economic benefit. With only a few modest hotels and restaurants in the village, few are cashing in meaningfully, though the family-owned Hotel Chalet Du Lac has enjoyed rising reservations from Asian guests in recent months. (Though the show’s streaming run ended early in 2020, the pandemic delayed the fans’ response.)

“I came to Switzerland 10 years ago, but at that time I didn’t know anything about Iseltwald,” said Young-ah Lee, 30, visiting from South Korea. “I found out about it through ‘Crash Landing on You,’ and I’m glad I got to come here because it’s such a beautiful place to visit.”

Ramya Mamidi, 22, an Indian American from Philadelphia, came with her sister to photograph the location. “You could really see the beauty of Switzerland in the show. I think that’s something they did really well,” she said.

Even these visiting fans see the risks of introducing tourism on this scale to such a small destination. On her visit, Lee expressed conflicting feelings: “I think it’s great that the show increased exposure to this place that otherwise wouldn’t have had that many visitors, but I could also see how it could be bad for the residents who live here, because of the increase of noise and disturbance.”

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