Sign up for VMSPACE, Korea's best architecture online magazine.

Login Join


TWO FACES FOR THE DISPARATE DESIRES OF A CITY: DONGTAN JANUS

Kim Dongjin + L¡¯EAU design

written by
Kim Dongjin
photographed by
Kyungsub Shin
materials provided by
L¡¯EAU design
edited by
Han Garam
background

 

Janus is a god from ancient Roman mythology, possessing one body and two faces that correspond to two contrasting impulses.
A human, despite the notion of the ego, is an agent of consciousness that communicates with an inner self, tends to create a persona unconsciously, and develop an exposed personality in order to enact one¡¯s role in society. When one experiences desires that are in conflict with those approved by their external context, one changes one¡¯s social mask and tries to carry on with one¡¯s life. But what about organisms like trees, which take root in the ground and remain silent in one place throughout their existence? Fixed in an environment, it seems pathetic that should be enduring their lives static and alone in an ever-changing world.
A space of man-made buildings, constructed as cultural products, is no different from this; faced with problems in given situations and looming social conflicts, to what extent do they need to curb their desires? Architects should listen to the desires and inner voices of buildings during the process of their creation. In other words, architects must recognise the issues that are inseparable from the context and conditions of the particular site and pay attention to situations that could arise. Attention must be paid to architectural outcomes during the implementation of a sense of place and various conflicts that might be encountered in the future. This means that when an existing environment becomes a place through the creation of architecture, the process requires an alternative that pays heed to its smooth introduction and operation.​

 


 

Dongtan Janus is in a small town on the Sillicheon café street in Dongtan. This building, one of many neighbourhood living facilities that line the stream, features an open view to the grassy park and the pleasant natural landscape along the southward Sillicheon Stream as its background. However, buildings in this area are of the same size as if they had been planned with this in mind, and they are only dressed with brick walls and small windows, standing abreast of each other and blocking the wide and open view behind them in a somewhat defensive way. None of them leave any room to breathe in this suffocating city.
On the north side, small cafés and restaurants cluster on both sides of the street in a charming way, and a large public on-road parking lot faces the site right in front. Therefore, a large inner space has been placed to the south to open it out toward the natural landscape at a distance, and the building maintains a distance from the street to the north to accommodate a complex urban structure that requires intimacy. A building on this site had to capture these diverse desires with two contrasting faces.
Considering the disconnected relationship between the urban and the natural, an opaque residential volume introduces a café to the first floor, which is due to have the maximum height in order to create a sense of extension open to the street. Next, the southern façade facing nature is as open as possible, and the northern façade facing the urban area is completely closed. The northern façade, which is approached from the street, is in deep shadow of its own making. The white elevation with a rough texture creates a ʻcontre-jour effectʼ through its own shadow. The contrast between ground floor interior and light streaming out through the side of the building emphasises this provocative opening and an absorbing accessibility.​

 

 

 


 

The residential space on the upper floor is home to common spaces, such as the living room, kitchen, and family room facing the south, which is wide-open to draw the natural landscape deep inside. A cosy courtyard terrace with a full view of the sky is at its centre. Unlike that of a more typical gable roof, the sloping inward roof allows light to permeate the courtyard. An architectural volume plays a role of a breathing apparatus that is capable of coordinating light and ventilation. Individual rooms that require greater privacy are placed at the north. Rooms in the north don¡¯t have windows, but light from the south can penetrate every corner of the interior through this internal void, while also providing an intimate semi-exterior space. This shows an active response from these residential facilities to contrasting conditions.
Dongtan Janus is a project that attempts to capture the heterogeneity of a site that exists between the city and the nature in one body. It is an architectural proposal to establish a more receptive relationship that embraces mutual weaknesses and conflicting values, rather than inculcating a dichotomous relationship between the desires that influence our city.​ (written by Kim Dongjin / edited by Han Garam)

 

 

Architect

Kim Dongjin (Hongik University) + L¡¯EAU design Co.

Design team

Cheon Yunpil, Cheon Suyeon, Won Jongyoung, Kim Gah

Location

6-36, Dongtandae-ro 14-gil, Hwaseong-si, Gyeonggi-

Programme

multi-family housing, neighbourhood living facilit

Site area

264§³

Building area

158.07§³

Gross floor area

480.45§³

Building scope

B1, 3F

Parking

4

Height

17.85m

Building to land ratio

59.08%

Floor area ratio

153.62%

Structure

RC

Exterior finishing

appointed tile, antico stucco (rasatura)

Structural engineer

SDM structural Engineering

Mechanical and electrical engineer

Suyang Engineering

Construction

Moowon Construction Co., Ltd.

Design period

Jan. – July 2018

Construction period

Jan. 2019 – Feb. 2020

Client

Park Sanghyun


Kim Dongjin
Kim Dongjin graduated from Hongik University with a bachelor¡¯s degree in Architecture and worked at SAC International, Ltd. He studied at the École Nationale Supérieure d¡¯Architecture de Paris-Belleville. Since 2000, he has been the president of L¡¯EAU design Co., Ltd. and since 2005 he has been professor of architecture design at the Graduate School of Architectural Engineering at Hongik University. His major works include Gongju Park Adhocracy, Nonhyun Matryoshka, Chengdam March Rabbit, Jeju Bayhill Pool and Villa, and Chengdam Bati-¤©. He won numerous architectural awards including the 31st, 38th, and 42nd Korean Institute of Architects Awards, the 25th and 33rd Seoul Architecture Awards, the 1st Young Architect Award, The Architecture Master Prize in 2019 in the U.S., and the Iconic Award 2015 in Germany. He has been invited to participate in domestic and international architectural exhibitions such as the 2016 Venice Biennale ʻThe FAR Gameʼ, and the 2014 Berlin International Exhibition, ʻSeoul: Towards a Meta-Cityʼ.

COMMENTS