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A Certain Impure and Surplus Need: The Pillar Suit | Flora and Fauna

Flora and Fauna

written by
Lee Dammy
photographed by
Lim Hyojin
materials provided by
Flora and Fauna
edited by
Park Jiyoun

SPACE February 2025 (No. 687) 

 

 

This project involved refurbishing an old table tennis room in a middle school. The space, remembered vaguely as a former dormitory for the school¡¯s soccer team, had become a table tennis room at some undefined point in the past. It remained untouched—a room with faded wallpaper, half-torn linoleum flooring, and mismatched, rickety household furniture awkwardly arranged. Amidst this disarray, the pingpong tables stood proud and dignified, ready to welcome students. Opening a side door revealed a vast white-tiled shower area, where a cleaning worker¡¯s modest bed and belongings brought a sense of warmth to the cold space. 

The task was straightforward: to clean and refresh the space, adding modern finishes. For a modernist, this might seem easy, but for me, it felt like grappling with an incomplete answer to a fundamental question. Over six months, I revised the design repeatedly, avoiding busy principals and ever-changing administrative staff. Looking back, the most significant moment in this process was the school¡¯s decision to keep the room as a pingpong room—nothing more, nothing less. Initially, they contemplated adding a billiard table, a small shower and changing area, or even a teachers¡¯ lounge. However, they finally resolved to leave the room to its original purpose. Stripping it of anything beyond the appropriate spacing between the tables, the room embraced its role as the seemingly least necessary yet quintessentially necessary space—a pure table tennis room.

Of course, new needs were met as well. A new entrance facing the sports field was added, and the cleaning worker¡¯s rest area was properly reconstructed. The expanded area included seating with benches and flooring, extending the room¡¯s role as a relaxation space for students adjacent to the cafeteria. Yet these additions failed to replace the room¡¯s accidental density and charm. Before the refurbishment, it was already a fascinating space—aged, dim, and slightly unsettling, with insufficient seating but rich in uncanny qualities. Its unintended eccentricities gave the building a sense of life, as if the corners of the room could conjure the school¡¯s secrets, adolescent laughter, or moody whispers. This was not a functional issue. The absence of necessity itself became a need̵...

 
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Architect

Flora and Fauna (Lee Dammy)

Location

48, Gurojungang-ro, Guro-gu, Seoul, Korea

Programme

pingpong room

Gross floor area

interior 225§³, exterior 21§³

Building scope

1F of the 5F

Interior finishing

water paint, SUS mesh

Design period

Oct. 2020 – May 2021

Construction period

June – Aug. 2021

Cost

about 170 million KRW

Client

Guro Middle School

Design scope

interior


Lee Dammy
Lee Dammy is the principal of Flora and Fauna. Lee investigates the modes of material existence and the possibilities of architectural imagery, activating the vitality of spaces and relationships through plants, animals, objects, and buildings. The work navigates the potential of both minimalism and surplus across diverse scales, materials, perspectives, and roles. Lee reexamines the industrialised and institutionalised architectural landscape, incorporating perspectives on nature, gender, and ornamentation. As both a translator attuned to the social, biological, and personal diversity of differences and a disruptor challenging reductive reproduction, Lee focuses on the (im)possibility of the architect¡¯s role as an intermediary. The practice continues to explore projects engaging with these multifaceted intersections.

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