Jung Hap Mo Gwoon trains in Korean martial arts out of the Taoist Sanctuary building at 4229 Park Boulevard, sharing floor space with the Chen-style taijiquan program and running on a Tuesday and Thursday evening schedule plus Saturday mornings. The twice-weekly evening block builds foundational Korean forms, stances, and defensive technique in a traditional dojang format, carrying a softer contact load than the strength-and-conditioning programming at Liber8Fit Underground a few blocks away. Training inside a shared sanctuary keeps class sizes small and the environment reverent, with mat space carved out of the same room used for Taoist Qi Gong and seated meditation. Higher-rank curriculum introduces joint-lock and pressure-point work drawn from the traditional Korean self-defense canon, a technical load that sends long-term students to recovery specialists at Vanessa Mergulhão Acupuncture for wrist and shoulder care. Rank testing combines forms, sparring, and traditional weapons technique into a single examination, the highest-stakes event on the school's calendar and the pivotal moment for students progressing toward black-belt ranks.