pubrio
Seoul National University Of Science And Technology

Seoul National University Of Science And Technology

South Korea · Higher Education

Education

Higher Education

Research

Technology

Seoul National University of Science and Technology (SeoulTech) is one of Korea's national universities. The university originated from a Vocational Supplementary School established in 1910 by Emperor Gojong’s Royal Decree. Later the school was re-organized as Gyeongseong Public Industrial School, Gyeonggi Technical College, and Gyeonggi Open Industrial University before it was finally reborn as Seoul National University of Technology in April 1993. The ground breaking ceremony took place on 18 April 2009 for a new building that will celebrate the 100th anniversary of its founding institution in 2010. With the celebration, in September 2010, the name was changed to Seoul National University of Science and Technology from Seoul National University of Technology. The institution is also known as 'SeoulTech'. Today SeoulTech is a large university housing six colleges, 32 departments, six graduate schools and a student enrolment of 14,000 people in a spacious campus of 500,000 square meters (124 acres). This is the 3rd largest campus out of universities in Seoul. The campus, formerly occupied by the engineering departments of Seoul National University, is in Nowon-gu in the northern part of Seoul.

Company Insights
Company Overview

1910

Founded

Higher Education

Industry

South Korea

Location

1,200,082

Ranking

900 employees

Size

Similar Companies

Get full access to view complete information

Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Seoul National University Of Science And Technology

Start your journey today

Start with the platform — or start with a conversation

Use Pubrio on your own, or let our team help you with research, lead generation, or data integration.

pubrio

Pubrio glocalizes business, people, and intent data from 50+ local sources into one global graph, giving AI and revenue teams full‑market visibility.​