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Relations and Boundaries: CONCRETEWALL

NAMELESS Architecture

written by
Na Unchung, Yoo Sorae
photographed by
Roh Kyung
materials provided by
NAMELESS Architecture
edited by
Bang Yukyung
background

SPACE September 2023 (No. 670) 

What relationship exists between the natural and the artificial? Where does the boundary between the two lie? The exposed sand and gravel in the cracks of concrete walls is no different to the exposed plane of rough stones. Is this natural or artificial? Grasses probe and gentle breezes blow through crevices in the concrete. When contemplating how nature and the artificial are related, the fundamentals of architecture are called into question.The site is located at a point where mountains and water meet, on the edge of Cheongpungho Lake, Jecheon. The origins of this place¡¯s name, which translates as fresh wind and bright moon, alludes to a quaintness that characterises a site encircled by nature. Here, an open and loose sensory café was envisioned to replace the previous narrative with an experience of the place. This began with the wall and roof—the basic elements of architecture. The wall divides the yard and connects the different layers in this space as it crosses the sloped site. A horizontal plate was positioned on top to form a boundary between the outside and the inside. The wall and roof create a layered impression and presents gaps in the three-dimensional topography, allowing air and light to pass through.

An experience of this place is made up of spatial sequences generated by the intersection of nature and the artificial. The visitor¡¯s passage begins by going underground. When descending the stairs created by widening the entrance to the site, the wall that shapes the sinking flow of this form also invites the forest at the front of the building into the interior. The yard of light, where light permeates the gap in the ceiling, appears beyond the counter. When one approaches this again on the upper level, the concrete stone columns and the untidy yard of stone form a counterpoint to each other, defining the relationship between nature and the artificial. The dematerialised surface of the water space, created at the front of the dining building, undulates and forces light to bounce off the rough concrete wall surface. Interrelationships between stone and concrete, wall and plate, and nature and the artificial all coexist on this site. To capture as sense of the connection between the two different subjects, one must first examine the boundary between them. (written by Na Unchung, Yoo Sorae / edited by Bang Yukyung)​ 

 

​You can see more information on the SPACE No. 670 (September 2023).​ ​ ​

 

Architect

NAMELESS Architecture (Na Unchung, Yoo Sorae)

Design team

Lee Changsoo, Lee Jungho, Gang Taekgyu, Park Jiho

Location

1566, Cheongpungho-ro, Geumseong-myeon, Jecheon-s

Programme

neighbourhood living facility (café)

Site area

2,843§³

Building area

262.15m§³

Gross floor area

290.46§³

Building scope

B1, 2F

Parking

19

Height

6.4m

Building to land ratio

9.22%

Floor area ratio

10.22%

Structure

RC

Exterior finishing

exposed concrete chipping, hammered concrete, gla

Interior finishing

exposed concrete chipping, polished concrete

Structural engineer

Eden Structural Engineering Group

Mechanical and electrical engineer

SUN ENG

Construction

TAEYOUN D&F

Design period

June – Dec. 2021

Construction period

Apr. 2022 – Apr. 2023

Client

CONCRETEWALL

Landscape design

Studio L


NAMELESS Architecture
NAMELESS Architecture is an ideas-based design practice. Na Unchung and Yoo Sorae each graduated from Hongik University and Korea University. They also both received an M.Arch. from the University of California, Berkeley in the United States. After establishing NAMELESS Architecture in New York in 2010, they expanded their office to Seoul. They run a practice committed to simplicity in an unpredictable world, where they explore the worlds of architecture, city, and global cultural phenomena.

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