[1][2] Official photos and descriptions of the location depict there being a log cabin and several barracks at the site.
Not only is it the supposed birthplace of the Korean people, but also the story of Dangun is extremely connected to the area.
[2] The importance of the camp's site is one of the reasons it has been used so pervasively in North Korean state propaganda.
[2] The camp has also been used to support the North Korea's enormous cultural focus on the Korean occupation by Japan.
[4] The camp has also been important to the cult of personality surrounding Kim Jong Suk[5]