Sumokwon Saenghwal Oncheon is a natural-friendly hot spring facility located in Dalseo-gu, Daegu. It offers mineral-rich hot spring water that provides benefits for relieving fatigue and improving skin beauty. Besides the hot springs, there are various saunas and healing facilities where visitors can relax comfortably. The main facilities include the large hot spring pool, bather pool, Chuncheon Yeonok Bulgama, and a fitness center. Sumokwon Saenghwal Oncheon is an important healing spot in Daegu that provides rejuvenation for both body and mind.
Cheommosae near Sangin Middle and High School is a clan house built by the Miryang Son family to commemorate Son Geukryong and his son Son Gyeongbang. Son Gyeongbang passed the military service examination in 1678 (the 4th year of King Sukjong) and held the post of Jeolchung Janggun Buho-gun. It is a tiled house with a paljak-style roof, consisting of three rooms on the front (two rooms and one daecheong) and two on the side, built on a natural stone pedestal with round wooden pillars. Near Cheommosae, there is Sahyodang, dedicated to the filial piety of talented Son Gyeonggyu. Son Gyeonggyu, worshiped at Sahyodang, cut his finger to feed his sick father blood and kept him alive, and after his father's death, he conducted all funeral rites. This place is a building with two rooms and one daecheong. According to records left by Park Seungdong regarding the construction of Cheommosae, the Miryang Son family moved around 1592, the year of the Imjin War, from the current Gyeongsangbuk-do Cheongdo-gun Gaegbuk-myeon area to the current location in Sangin-dong, Dalseo-gu, Daegu. Descendants have lived here since then. Cheommosae and Sahyodang are managed by the Miryang Son family clan.
The 'Prehistoric Era Theme Street' in Dalseo-gu, Daegu, is a street that connects the past and present by modernly recreating prehistoric relics that trace Daegu's history back 20,000 years. It features the 'Imanong' sculpture, the promotional ambassador of Dalseo-gu, and a street museum made by selecting actual prehistoric relics excavated in the region, then creating 1:10 scale enlarged exhibition sculptures identical to the originals. The street murals extend from Sanghwa-ro through the Prehistoric Relics Park to Wolbae-ro. Near Jinchon Intersection, the first phase of the Prehistoric Theme Street includes prehistoric miniatures and stone axe benches. The second phase covers the Dalseo Prehistoric Hall, Hansem Bronze Park, Seondol Madang Park, and the Yucheon-dong Administrative Welfare Center area, featuring prehistoric miniatures. The third phase, in Seondol Park, comprises moving mammoth sculptures, pit houses, prehistoric miniatures, and the Seondol Garden, built with representative Seondols from all eight provinces. Currently, the fourth phase of the Prehistoric Era Theme Street is under development.
Wolgok History Park is a park located in Dalseo-gu, Daegu, where visitors can enjoy both history and nature. This park was created based on the historical background of Wolgok-ri and exhibits various historical sites and cultural properties, providing educational value to visitors. In addition, the park features wide walking paths and a nature-friendly environment, offering a space where families can leisurely stroll and relax. Wolgok History Park is popular as a leisure space for local residents and as a place for tourists to experience Daegu's history and culture. It is an important site where one can feel the historical value of Daegu.
Yeollakdang is a jesael (ancestral hall) commemorating the patriotic loyalty and scholarly spirit of Wolgok U Baeseon, a militia leader from Daegu during the late Joseon period. It is located within Wolgok Historical Park in Wolchon Village, Sangin-dong, Dalseo-gu, Daegu. Wolgok U Baeseon (1599–1620), who raised a militia at age 24 during the Japanese invasions of Korea (Imjin War) and achieved military success, retired from his government post and returned to his hometown, where he established a study room and lectured on learning, naming it Yeollakdang (悅樂堂). The jesael had fallen into decline and lost its original form, but in 1995, the clan gathered their will and rebuilt it at the foot of Jangjisan Mountain, using it as a memorial space. It fully embodies the clan's desire to honor the militia struggle and patriotic scholarly spirit of Wolgok U Baeseon during the Imjin War. The building features a gate, a main facade with 5 kan and side facade with 2 kan, consisting of three rooms and two open halls, with a gabled roof tiled with Paljak style tiles and stone walls surrounding it. The park where Yeollakdang is located includes walking paths, resting areas, a playground, and a pond. The flowers blooming in each season are beautiful, and especially the bamboo forest path, together with Yeollakdang, is another attraction of Wolgok Historical Park.
Nakdong Seowon is currently located in Wolgok History Park, Dalseo-gu, Daegu. It was established in 1708 (the 34th year of King Sukjong) under the name Deokdong Seowon to honor U Hyeonbo (禹玄寶), the ancestor of the Danyang Woo clan, and U Baeseon (禹拜善), a militia leader during the Imjin War. After being abolished during the seowon closure order, the buildings disappeared, but in 1965, Woo Jong-sik and Woo Jong-muk, 17th-generation descendants of the Panseo branch of the Danyang Woo clan, personally rebuilt it, renamed it Nakdong Seowon, and dedicated it to the local Confucian scholars. Currently, Woo Hyeonbo and U Baeseon are enshrined together with Woo Tak (禹倬), Shin Hyun (申賢), and Woo Gil-saeng (禹吉生). Among them, Woo Tak was originally worshiped at Yeokdong Seowon in Yean, but after Yeokdong Seowon was abolished in 1871 (the 8th year of King Gojong), he was re-enshrined at Nakdong Seowon. The seowon consists of the shrine Gyehyeonsa and the lecture hall Jeonggyodang. The three-kan lecture hall bears a signboard reading "Nakdong Seowon." The eastern annex is called Cheo-inheon, and the western annex is Jigyungjae, each with their own signboards. The front projecting section is a two-kan wooden terrace, and the remaining two kan are ondol rooms. Unlike the typical layout of Joseon-era seowons, which arrange the lecture hall centrally and annexes to the east and west, Nakdong Seowon features a 'ㄱ'-shaped building that houses the lecture hall and two annexes. The memorial rites are held annually in the lunar month of March.