A visit to Manhattan’s Koreatown, on West 32nd Street, often requires dodging crowds. Just 30 minutes across the Hudson River from Port Authority on NJ Transit busses ($4.50, round trip) is a more laid-back Koreatown in Palisades Park, NJ. It has enough restaurants, karaoke spots and signs in Hangul script to keep any Korea fix going long after the Olympics.

Here are a few of our faves in what locals call Pal Park.

Relax

It’s easy to get lost inside the 24-hour King Spa & Sauna — a 40,000-square-foot facility that includes 11 saunas, separate men’s and women’s areas with hot- and cold-water baths and a food court serving, among other tasty dishes, a variety of bibimbap rice bowls ($15). Best of all, the atmosphere remains calm.

“It’s a place to relax and get out of [the city],” says Brooklyn resident Mykola Danylenko, who made a recent visit. “The heat is nice during the winter. It’s cozy.”

Warming options include saunas built of rock salt for skin care or lined with 23-karat gold leaves for immunity. A nearly 400-degree sweat room is heated by oak wood for detox. For a cool-down, sip a chilled sikhye rice beverage ($7). Too relaxed? A $10 surcharge lets you spend the night in lounges filled with recliners. And saunas are open all night. ($55 entry fee; 321 Commercial Ave.; KingSaunaNJ.com; free shuttle bus from Fifth Avenue and 31st Street several times a day)

Sip boldface coffee

Not only does the Kudo Society Cafe roast its own beans — but if you order a latte, a specialized drip machine can imprint an image of your favorite celebrity, or your own smile, into the froth.

“It’s fun to drink your own face!” quips Jeff Ryu, whose wife, Cherie, is the owner.

Kudo Society serves other offbeat offerings. Try a Kudossant pastry, a croissant/waffle hybrid that can be topped with ice cream and whipped cream ($9.95). Bubble tea flavors include taro and rose (from $4.50). Adriel Martin comes three times weekly from nearby Bergenfield, NJ, for the black milk bubble tea. “The flavor’s unique,” he says. (138 W. Central Blvd.; KudoSociety.com)

Get in tune

Add a high note to your trip to Palisades Park by belting out a high note. Encore Karaoke, a roomy spot with seven private rooms, has a thick song catalog boasting at least 10,000 tunes in a variety of languages — including English, Korean, Japanese and Vietnamese. (English-language favorites include The Beatles classic “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and Whitney Houston’s “I Wanna Dance With Somebody.”)

“My major customers are party groups,” says John Min, who owns Encore with his wife, Heather. The biggest room can hold up to 25 people ($120 party/hour) — and guests, for $10 per party hourly surcharges can bring in food, beer or wine — or rent an electric guitar or a drum set for extra sound. (From $35; 408 Broad Ave.; 201-592-9998)

Play games

You’ll need some balls to come here — billiard balls. King Billiards has 11 tables — seven of which are pocketless for east Asian games, including four-ball, or “sagu” in Korean. “I like this pool game,” says Sung Song, who comes four or five times per week to play with friends. The objective: Hit two red balls with the cue in a single strike. (There are other variations with three, six and nine balls.) Customers of all ages come here for the games. King Billiards has an Internet cafe, and beverages such as a green tea latte ($3.75) or a banana smoothie ($5) are available. ($12 for two people/hour; 450 Broad Ave.; 201-947-4949)

Grill out

Fans of the now-shuttered Muk Eun Ji eatery in Manhattan’s Koreatown — whose seafood pancakes were second to none — can head to Palisades Park, where the owners have a restaurant with the same name on Broad Avenue. But this New Jersey spot, which is attached to a liquor store, is more focused on its barbecue menu. Tables are equipped with small grills, where diners can fire up orders of bulgogi rib eye ($22.99), samgyeopsal pork belly ($19.99) or chadolbagi beef brisket ($20.99). A small portion of the menu is dedicated to nonbarbecue choices. Opt for the muk eun kimchi gopdol bibimbap ($15.99) — a beef, rice, vegetable and egg bowl that comes spiced with stir-fried, pork-infused kimchi cabbage. (217 Broad Ave.; 201-363-0600)