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Living Past, Old Future: Song Hyun Jae, Kukje Gallery

Urban Ark

written by
Sun Hur, Sungwoo Yim, Hyunsoo Kim
photographed by
An Chunho(Kukje Gallery) unless otherwise indicate
materials provided by
Urban Ark
edited by
Ryu Jin
background

 

 

Kukje gallery, located in the historical and cultural hub in Seoul, has expanded its gallery spaces in order of K1, 2 & 3 since 1987. Song Hyun Jae is the next step; which is to renovate an old Hanok built in 1935 into cultural spaces. This project should be understood in the context of the entire art cluster formed by the Kukje galleries. Due to the staggered construction, the interconnection between the galleries was loose and the visitor¡¯s spatial awareness of the entire cluster was low. Also, the area of Sogyeok-dong, where Kukje gallery is located, faces Gyeongbokgung, the main palace of the last dynasty in Korea, so there was the issue of preserving tradition according to the District Unit Plan of the area. Therefore this project should play an active role as a contemporary medium for strengthening the spatial connection among the galleries while presenting the traditional aesthetics of the Hanok itself. Song Hyun Jae was very challenging project as it had to accommodate three different programs under one roof: a bookstore, a viewing room, a private room with a lounge. Originally built for residential purposes, this small ¡®U¡¯- shaped Hanok had to satisfy new functions and volumes. Moreover, very strict local regulatory matters limited any excessive changes from the existing appearance in terms of original layout of structure and materials.

 

 

 

 

To solve these problems, ¡®urban ark¡¯ focused on the traditional spatial structure and  Madang. The essence of Korean traditional architecture lies in its deliberately loose spatial dimension that enables flexible and versatile spaces. In Hanok, indoor and outdoor floors including an outdoor yard called Madang are important elements. The floor is loosely defined with movable partition windows and low fence walls to form individual indoor and outdoor spaces. And when other functions are needed, the floor expands elastically, creating a new space that breaks down clear boundaries within and outside the space. However, despite the nature of the Hanok, unfortunately the old residence had lost its original appearance and spatial richness due to ill-mannered modification in the mean time since 1935. To meet the new requirements, the Madang, a small but elaborately designed empty space, is combined with the interior space containing the necessary functions. These indoor and outdoor spaces were connected through a large frame window like a picture frame of art between them, and they were matched to the same floor level. In this way, the space expands visually and physically to embrace other events flexibly. The bookstore is located in front of the building as a show window to welcome the public, and the viewing room and the private room with the lounge are arranged on either side of the ¡®U¡¯-shape. Each program with an individual Madang operates independently, but maintains overall spatial integrity by sharing the main Madang placed in the center of the Hanok.

 

 

 

 

Song Hyun Jae is finely designed in a contemporary way, inheriting the aesthetics of the materiality and spatial flexibility of the traditional Hanok. The past should not be preserved as stuffed because of its mere relic value, but should be rediscovered and reinterpreted as a material for constructing the function and aesthetic sensibility of the present. Therefore, Song Hyun Jae, which shows the 'living past, old future' as if it already existed​, comes to us not as a result of traditional restoration, but as a contemporary architecture with the same intensity. Now it is expected that Song Hyun Jae will become a classy cultural place that strengthens the brand image of Kukje gallery while composing part of the landscape in the historical area.

 

Image courtesy of Chamooree


Image courtesy of Urban Ark

 

Floor plan before(left) & after(right)


Elevation views(front, side, rear, longitudinal, cross-sectional) & structural decomposition diagram


Conceptual diagram of the connection between the main Madang and each program

Architect

Urban Ark(Hyunsoo Kim, Sungwoo Yim, Sun Hur)

Design team

Hyunsoo Kim

Location

48-14 Samcheong-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Korea

Programme

bookstore, viewing room, private room(VIP lounge)

Site area

214.9§³

Building area

96.03§³

Gross floor area

96.03§³

Building scope

1F

Building to land ratio

44.69%

Floor area ratio

44.69%

Structure

Traditional wooden structure

Exterior finishing

oil & traditional Korean lacquer mixture stained o

Interior finishing

micro cement rendered on CRC board(wall), wooden s

Mechanical and electrical engineer

Yousung

Construction

Chamooree

Design period

2020.09. ~ 2021.06.

Construction period

2021.06. ~ 2022.03.

Client

Kukje Gallery

Landscape design

Garden in Forest Co. Ltd.

Interior design

Urban Ark

Fixed furniture production & installation

dbdb studio


Sun Hur
Sun Hur is the founding partner and a chartered British architect. He started training at Tai Soo Kim Partners in 1995. He later studied at the AA School in London before joining Ian Ritchie Architects. He carried out numerous projects in U.K and Europe; which were exhibited at the British pavilion in the 2004 Venice Architectural Biennale. After returning to Korea in 2007, he joined Samoo architects & engineers for global projects and finally established Urban Ark Architects in 2017.
Sungwoo Yim
Sungwoo Yim is the founding partner of Urban Ark Architects and a registered Korean architect. He was awarded M.Arch from the Graduate School of Konkuk University. After graduation, he joined Haeahn Architecture and had accumulated working experience in cultural, business and commercial facilities. Since the establishment of Urban Ark Architects he has been working on a variety of spectrums, from architectural design to urbanism such as YiEUM office, Multistorey car park & commercial in Pyeongtaek, starting with the competition winning project, Daegu Gomo station Regeneration.
Hyunsoo Kim
He started his professional career at Design camp moonpark(dmp) and had accumulated professional capability in cultural & business facilities. He established Urban Ark Architects with Sungwoo Yim. He won the competition for the Korean Empire historical cultural trail, which is part of the regeneration project in Jeong-dong, Seoul, and has worked on a number of projects including Taejuheon (Korean traditional house-Hanok), Cheongdam floating strata. He is interested in various fields including object design.

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