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It was last night when everyone was holding their breath and worried about the prospect that it might be a typhoon that we have never experienced before.

Restoration work has begun in some places as the sun has risen, but many have collapsed and have been submerged.



This time, reporter Hong Young-jae took a helicopter and looked at the affected area.



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two-lane road was cut off due to the sand that was pushed down, and a new waterfall was created.



The only remaining form of the guardrail shows that this was a road.



A nearby two-lane road collapsed as if it had been bombed.



The Hyeongsan River, which runs through Gyeongju and Pohang, partially overflowed and covered the surrounding farm roads and paddy fields with yellow soil.



The workshop excavator could not withstand the current and was thrown into the river bed.



Residents who have returned to their houses and warehouses with only their roofs exposed in the landslide are struggling to recover.



Although the typhoon has passed, the Pohang road is still a sea of ​​water with record heavy rain.



A bus swims through a flooded road where it is difficult to tell whether it is a river or a road without a traffic light.



Ulsan, where the typhoon escaped.



The strong winds laid down the grass of the national garden along the Taehwa River.



The Simnidae Forest promenade, which used to be visited by tourists, has turned into a muddy field.



Haeundae, Busan, hit by a typhoon.



Coastal sidewalks, where sidewalk blocks and pavements were torn by strong winds and heavy rain, have become a mess.



As the typhoon has passed and the days have cleared, the restoration work is in full swing, but it seems that it will take quite a while for the scars left by Typhoon Hinnamno to heal.



(Video coverage: Park Hyun-chul, video editing: Kim Jun-hee, helicopter pilot: Min Byeong-ho)