North Korea has closed a model village in Pyongyang because it reminds leader Kim Jong-un of his executed uncle who managed the project, media reports said on Tuesday.

Pyongyang Folk Village, which features miniature versions of the capital’s buildings, was completed in 2012, with Kim describing it as the brainchild of his deceased father Kim Jong-il.

Its construction was overseen by Jang Song-thaek, once the second most powerful man in North Korea who was convicted of treason and executed in late 2013.

Jang was described as a “traitor” and derided as “despicable human scum... worse than a dog” by the state news agency, KCNA.

South Korea’s Yonhap news agency quoted sources saying that Kim ordered “Mini Pyongyang” to be dismantled as it reminded him of Jang.

“Whenever Kim passed by Pyongyang Folk Village, he complained it brought Jang back to his mind,” one source was quoted as saying.

A second source said the ruling communist party had shredded brochures promoting the village.

But Nick Bonner, director of Koryo Tours, a travel agency specialising in tours to the DPRK, said the country’s tourism authority told the company the closure was temporary.

“We were told last week it’s closed for renovation,” he added.

Tourist trips to the site are rare, he said, as visitors prefer to see the real Pyongyang rather than its model replica.

The 200-hectare (500-acre) model village features scaled versions of propaganda monuments and buildings in Pyongyang, including the Juche (self-independence) tower topped with the torch of revolution.

It also contains replicas of palaces that existed at the time of the Koryo dynasty, which ruled from the 10th to the 14th centuries.

According to estimates in South Korean media, the village cost millions of dollars to build.