South Korea Is Aging Faster Than Any OECD Country. Its Cities Were Built for the Workers Who Stayed. They Are Old Now.

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Elderly residents navigate a steep pedestrian walkway in an aging residential district of Seoul.

SEOUL · May 5, 2026 : South Korea is aging faster than any OECD country, but its cities remain relics of rapid industrialization. For decades, Seoul’s planning was a machine for productivity, designed for a young workforce. Today, that generation is entering their 70s, living in apartment complexes built during the 1980s and 90s. These structures now present a massive infrastructure gap for a population with decreasing mobility and increasing care needs.

The Legacy of the Miracle

The 1980s and 90s apartment blocks were built for the industrial nuclear family. These vertical communities are now aging alongside their inhabitants. Unlike newer developments with integrated social services, these older complexes lack essential care infrastructure. Elevators, ramps, and neighborhood walkability: once optimized for young workers: now serve as barriers for seniors. The "Miracle on the Han River" has left behind a landscape that effectively strands its builders in high-rise isolation.

Elderly residents in Seoul resting by high-rise apartment towers, illustrating aging urban infrastructure.
A group of senior citizens gathered in a small public park between high-rise apartment buildings in Seoul.

The Policy Mismatch

The government has spent an estimated $200 billion on pro-natalist policies to combat the record-low 0.7 fertility rate, yet success is limited. Meanwhile, elder care has not received the same scale of urgency. Over 40% of the elderly live in poverty, forcing many to work well past the OECD average retirement age. The city must now pivot from trying to invent a future population to supporting the one it currently has.

Embedding Care into the Fabric

Seoul needs an elder care infrastructure plan embedded into the existing residential fabric. This requires converting underused commercial spaces into day-care centers and retrofitting transit for a demographic that will soon make up nearly half the population. The window to adapt the city’s bones to its aging heart is closing.

Source: bcd-w.xyz

Tags: Seoul / Aging / Elder Care / Urban Policy / Demographics

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