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The Flow of Ground Between Mountain and Water: JiYuWon

Project : Architecture

written by
John Hong
photographed by
Project : Architecture
materials provided by
Project : Architecture
edited by
Ryu Jin

 

 

Even as Korea¡¯s diverse landscapes provide a unique cultural and historical context, critical explorations of the junction between architecture and topography remain relatively sparse. Located at the vital watershed where two branches of the Hanggang River and the Kyeong-an stream converge, this cultural space for the appreciation of art and music transforms a steep slope between mountain and water into spatial and ecological flows.

 

 

 

Though the allowable footprint was only 200§³ due to its adjacency to nature reserves, the building utilizes half-levels, closely matched with the existing topography, to expand visitors¡¯ experience and to minimize disturbance to the sensitive site. Exterior paths are brought into the building at one level and exit out another while at each turn, vistas extend to the stunning waterways and mountain ranges beyond.

 

 

 

 

As an allegory of how the building form was generated to minimize disturbance to the site, its stone cladding is cut into thin corners to reference the topographic lines of the original landscape survey. The multi-level roof is also considered a fragment of both the cultural landscape and the art-related programs with large stepped areas for gathering. The central sunken courtyard distills the complex building section into a series of Piranesian steps and bridges.

 

 

 

The project¡¯s name, ¡®JiYuWon¡¯ can be translated as ¡®the flow of ground.¡¯ Since the site¡¯s surrounding waterways play a vital role in the ecological health of the Hanggang (and therefore to the entire Seoul region), the project¡¯s topographic approach is a critique of the majority of buildings in the area that fail to safeguard the waterway. Landscape buffer-zones filter polluted run-off from the adjacent highway before it reaches the adjacent streams. The minimal building footprint in conjunction with its stepped form captures rainwater and releases it slowly into the adjacent absorptive gardens instead of into the natural streams.

 

 

Architect

Project : Architecture(John Hong), Dain Architects

Design team

Eunseop Suh(team leader), Hoseung Lee, Yeongshin S

Location

Gyeongi-do, Gwangju-si

Programme

Gallery, performance space, guest-house

Site area

928§³

Building area

234§³

Gross floor area

198§³

Building scope

2F

Parking

2

Height

8.3m

Building to land ratio

25.00%

Floor area ratio

21.00%

Structure

exposed concrete

Exterior finishing

limestone, granite

Interior finishing

paint, limestone, wood flooring

Structural engineer

TODAAM

Electrical engineer

Hanshin E&C

Construction

Dami Construction

Design period

2020. 04. ~ 2021. 03.

Construction period

2021. 05. ~ 2022. 04.


John Hong
John Hong AIA, LEED AP is an architect and professor at Seoul National University and the director of Project : Architecture. His work bridges the scales of architecture and urbanism and converges the mediums of drawings, material, theory, and computation. He was associate professor in practice at the Harvard University GSD and has held visiting professorships at other major universities including the University of Pennsylvania.

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