If you're staying here, you've got a lot of reasons to hang around the hotel: beautiful views, a great bar, and a tech-outfitted room. Read more.
Wi Spa is one of the newest spas in the 'hood and it has modern conveniences like WiFi, plus five restaurants, while still offering the trappings of a traditional Korean spa. Read more.
Ktown's got speakeasy-style drinking (R Bar, anyone?). Lock & Key now has food service (that's rumored to be pretty good), so that puts it at the top of the list for us. Read more.
Built in 1929, the building holds murals and "the most important organ in the West by people who know about organs." Pop in or attend one of their many events to get a better look. Read more.
Insomniacs, drunks, and jetlagged travelers will never be forced to eat food from a gas station or Denny's in this neighborhood. Read more.
Peruvian-style rotisserie chicken from Spanish-speaking, Korean restaurateurs—nothing encapsulates the full-on melting pot of the neighborhood like this place. Get fries and ají (salsa-like sauce). Read more.
A clean, quiet, relatively little-trafficked theater that shows mainstream and Korean films (with English subtitles). Even when it's full, this hidden gem is quiet, clean, and comfortable. Read more.
If the Korean and American snacks in your minibar aren't your style, stock up on imported Greek olive oils, vinegars, cheeses, and pastries at this iconic Byzantine-Latino-Quarter eatery and market. Read more.
This spot in the back of a parking lot on Western lets guests vote on the tunes and has craft beers on tap. Their bar food is better than most; the mac and cheese is highly recommend. Read more.