

The continuous
development of South Korea and its capital town Seul makes this asiatic
country one of the most advanced in world with regard to economy, information
and all services related to new technologies. this evolution is clearly
reflected in architecture, which expresses the dynamism and the fast transformation
of the activities into the urban Korean environment: a compressed texture
which is more and more congested by many different facilities and installations.
Cho Minsuk's approach is to put aside every single attempt to award identification
and tradition to korean architecture as "this country has suffered
so many changes during the last half century that any attempt of a stylistic
creation would have had only an artificial and false appearence". The
will to work out a new way of the korean indentity, more spontaneous and
sticking to today's realities, is transferred through Xi Gallery in Yeonsan-dong,
Pusan. the first building in the world which keeps a new tipology: a cultural
centre into the residential building.
It is not a chance that the name "Xi" comes from the brand name
of flats which are sold as models in full scale inside the building. the
whole is surrounded by places which are able to give shelter to many commercial
activities and entertainment. The building structure is organised in a vertical
way: “Cubist Mountains” consecrated to car parking and activities related
to ground floor; “Cubist Cloud”, the upper floor is light and floating thanks
to higly technological materials as ETFE which reduce materialness and phisical
presence.
We can argue that Cho Minsuk and its Mass Studies are able to transfer their
architectural idea of complete adhesion to today's realities with wisdom
and great capacity of control, thus helping in giving new life to Korean
identity.
Davide Di Virgilio - Channelbeta
Located in Yeonsan-dong,
Pusan, this building was constructed for the purpose of promoting “Xi,”
a brand of apartments. In addition to the standard type of an apartment
unit exhibition space (a common practice in Korea to publicize and market
prospect constructions), a even larger share of the floor area is allocated
as a variable cultural space for the locals, which as a result creates a
brand-new building typology: a Housing Cultural Center.
As economic forces and cultural activities seem to form complex interrelationships
causing our private and public spheres to merge and invade each other, this
building comes as a product of these current phenomena. The focus of our
investigation is to create a fluid space that can respond to the “continuously
new” situations arising from the dynamic flux of economy and culture, and
in the organization of the movement system to correspond to such a space.
This new movement organization is necessary to maintain the existing individuality
of the spaces, but at the same time be able to expand/unify them in diverse
manners to suit future possible needs. Through this, we may be able to discover
a new type of spatial efficiency to actively respond to the present and
near-future cultural variances, and subsequently open the possibilities
for a progressive culture.
This four story, 9,491 m2 building is organized as follows:
First Floor:
This floor serves
as pedestrian and vehicular access. In the most prominent street corner,
a spacious outdoor staircase flows up to the second floor as a pedestrian
entrance, while the rest of the first floor as marked as a parking lot and
a small lobby to connect to the upper floors.
Second and Third
Floor:
A variety of public cultural programs are located on these floors. They efficiently connect the first and fourth floor, while the organization creates a different spatial condition as opposed to those functionally focused ones. The fundamental logic is as follows: All the programs that act as a closed-off block (lecture hall, yoga room, offices, future housing exhibits, etc.) are dispersed within this 2 floor height space as each individual volumes. Simultaneously, all the remaining spaces are adjoined to flow in a continuous manner, and accommodates the rest of the open programs (special exhibition hall, open lecture room, hall, lounge, etc.), by adjusting the locations of the closed masses.
These two typologies placed within this 2 floor height space are therefore all interconnected, and is a composition of small private spaces within a large open field.For the visual/physical fluidity of the open space, the open/closed spaces are divided by sloped, folding surfaces. The slopes expand the line of sight as well as acting as means for vertical movement (such as a staircase), or even landscaping. As a result, these 2 floors act as one large dynamic and topographical surface, while fulfilling the programmatic requirements. Furthermore, these topographical spaces can be effectively reorganized in unlimited ways. Movements in this space escapes from the standard orthogonal norm to be organized like a non-linear, 3-dimensional net, and encourages and supports dynamic spatial use.
Fourth Floor:
The uppermost floor is dedicated for apartment unit exhibitions. This 3,396m2 space has a maximum ceiling height of 7m, allowing up to 7 different unit types to be showcased at once. The truss structure permits a wide 35m column span, creating a universal, neutral space for varying situations. At the centers of its 4 edges are different access facilities such as elevators, stairs and escalators, as well as a stepped rest space.
As a result of such
spatial and circulatory manipulation, the building mass can be organized
into two parts: The ‘Cubist Mountains’, the under mass, from the first floor
parking space to the programs connected on the second floor; and the ‘Cubist
Cloud,’ the over mass, of the 4th floor exhibition space and the programs
attached to its 3rd floor. These two masses minimize their contact, and
the third in-between space is created to form the large, open, abstract,
topographical space. These two elements cast a strong contrast, and the
spatial depth, direction and views change in response to one’s movements
in between them, opening up new programmatic possibilities.
The lower Cubist Mountains form two hills and a valley in between, and are
finished with familiar textures and landscaping elements in its interior
and exterior, to be experienced as a physical topography. The upper Cubist
Cloud is finished with white ceilings and transparent/translucent ETFE (Ethylene
Tetrafluoroethylene) air cushion skin to minimize materiality and physical
presence. Moreover, the ETFE skin is lit when dark, further inducing the
upper mass as a light, floating volume.
Mass
Studies - Cho Minsuk_Park Kisu
Fuji
Bldg. 4F
683-140 Hannam 2-dong Yongsan-gu
Seoul 140-892
Korea
PROJECT
DATA
ARCHITECT : cho,minsuk + park,kisu
DESIGN TEAM : mass studies
LOCATION : 1123-1 Yonsan-dong, Yonjae-gu, Pusan, Korea
SITE AREA : 10074.80 m2
GROSS FLOOR AREA: 3613.94 m2
TOTAL FLOOR AREA: 9400.79 m2
BUILDING-TO-LAND RATIO: 35.87%
FLOOR AREA RATIO: 93.31%
BUILDING SCOPE : 3f, pilloti
STRUCTURE: sc
FINISHING: plant box, ETFE, Polycarbonate
DESIGN PERIOD : 2006.11~2007.03
CONSTRUCTION PERIOD : 2007.03~2007.08
FIRM BRIEF:
Mass Studies was founded in 2003 by Minsuk Cho in Seoul, Korea, as a critical investigation of architecture in the context of mass production, intensely over-populated urban conditions, and other emergent cultural niches that define contemporary society. Amid the many frictions defining spatial conditions in the twenty-first century, namely past vs. future, local vs. global, utopia vs. reality, and individual vs. collective, Mass Studies focuses on the operative complexity of these multiple conditions instead of striving for a singular, unified perspective. For each architectural project, which exist across a wide range of scales, Mass Studies explores issues such as spatial systems/matrixes, building materials/techniques, and typological divergences to foster a vision that allows the discovery of new socio/cultural potential.
LINKS:
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Channelbeta Information Channel on Contemporary Architecture |

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[2008-06-11] |
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photo by Yong-Kwan Kim
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