Cold water and nude beaches don't necessarily mix well.

Add to the equation a very conservative society and the idea of a nude beach seems rather ambitious, if not impossible.

In a surprisingly creative tourism push, officials in north east Gangwon Province are aiming to set up South Korea's first nude beach, with the first clothes to be shed in 2017.

It's an effort to boost tourism to the peninsula's east coast beaches, which lose out every year to the west coast in luring summer visitors from the capital Seoul.

Although the east coast has more beautiful, sandy beaches, the water tends to be colder, the season shorter and the distance from Seoul is greater than the beaches to the west.

Gangwon Province has about a month and a half of beach season each summer. Nokia Maps

The massively popular annual mud festival is also held on the west coast.

Skinny dip-friendly

"This is part of our plans to create beaches with specific purpose, like a beach for families, a beach for couples, a beach for pets, and yes, a nude beach," said an official from the municipality's Pan-East Sea Division at a seminar on Tuesday, according to the Korea Times

Calls by CNN to officials were not answered on Thursday.

Somewhat surprisingly, this is not the first time the subject has been broached by government officials.

And in the past it's the public that's shuttered the idea.

Gangwon Province tried to launch a female-only nude beach in 2005 , while Gangneung City also deliberated, but ultimately scrapped, a nude beach idea due to public outcry. The same happened to a Jeju Island proposal in 2009.

Which beach?

Officials have not yet decided which beach may be the first to go nude. They are also deliberating over a trial operation for foreigners only.

The premise is foreigners will be much more comfortable with the concept than locals.

"Koreans actually love nude beaches when they're traveling abroad, but the problem with having one within Korea is the fact that Korean society is so interconnected," Seoul-based travel reporter Chun Kyoung-woo told CNN.

"They won't be able to comfortably go to a nude beach due to the thought that people they know will find out about it quite easily."

That threat is reinforced given the country's has second-highest smartphone penetration rate in the world (73%, just behind United Arab Emirates' 73.8%) and a staggering 82.7% Internet penetration rate.

Early reaction to the concept was skeptical.