Jusimpo (Korean: 주심포) is a style of bracket in Korean architecture that is installed only on top of a column, and is a combination of a bracket, a ridgepole, cheomcha, salmi, and other structural members.
In the case of the cheomcha and salmi, the ends on both sides are decorated very ornately, and these ends are called yeonhwaduhyeong (연화두형, lotus head type) because they are carved in the shape of lotus buds.
[1] As a traditional architecture of the late Goryeo Dynasty, It showed various structural forms, but it began to unify into a certain form around the 16th century.
[3] Construction of Eunsusa Daeungjeon began in 1647 and was completed in 1655.
It is a building with a gable roof and a central sash.