That can be said of many great routes, but in the case of the Daegwallyeong pass over Korea’s eastern mountains, it is literal. Legend has it a famous Confucian philosopher, Yi I, traveled over it in the 1500s on his way from the East Sea to Seoul. Amazed at its steepness and curves, he ate a single pomegranate seed for each turn. In the end, he’d consumed 99 seeds. He called the road kubigubi, a phrase that translates, roughly, as “crazily curvy.”
In fact, spiky, foliage-covered mountains make up some 70 percent of Korea’s countryside. Although long the bane of tired travelers, today these roads are the great delight of a different kind of philosopher—those who tune chassis and suspensions. Former BMW M engineer Albert Biermann is justly famous as a chassis whisperer, and when he left BMW to take over R&D at Hyundai, Kia, and Genesis, he turned to Yi I’s famous road to become his real-world testing grounds.
And sure enough, on a summer weekday, we pass a camouflaged Kia prototype screeching up the road as we hurtle downhill the opposite way in a Genesis G70. It is one of Biermann’s boys, working hard. The road is steep but gifted with generous patches of excess asphalt in the switchbacks, and there is an extra uphill passing lane for the entire 11 miles. So we drive up and down and back up again, enjoying the G70’s pliability, picking off slower drivers in the corners. The gearing is perfect for the road. After all, much of its driving character was born here.
But the G70 isn’t what brought me to Korea. Rather it’s the marque itself. Genesis Motors became a stand-alone brand within the Hyundai Motor Group at the end of 2015. Last year it topped the J.D. Power initial quality rankings. Siblings Kia and Hyundai rounded out the top three. So it bears asking: How did the Koreans best the Germans and Japanese at their own game in such a short time?
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