Sunday 28 November 2010

Ichon APT 이촌 시펌총산 아파투


Hanging out Kimchi to dry



surprising garden between residences and motorway



Between the railway lands of Yongsan station, the Han River park and four lanes of traffic is the Ichon Ichon si pom chong san APT. Judging by the new apt cropping up around this complex this APT looks like it is in line to be demolished, and the land redeveloped. In comparison to newer APTs, this generation of building has more of a relationship to the city around it - a row of shops and a mixed use old block sits above it, there is some layering between the apartment blocks and the city beyond.


Thursday 25 November 2010

More Model

Modelling of the Samsung Remian APT I visited last month (Will post about that soon!) Juxtaposing the exterior and the interior of the building, at different scales. This is in order to deconstruct and exaggerate its features to help me develop some kind of alternative architectural vocabulary. Exploring the wrapping of space and the thickness of the floors but the lack of layering between extreme scales outside and inside. In many ways there are similarities with traditional housing - rooms are flexible and open planned but have distinct environmental qualities that dictate potential activities....





Design for a Post-Neo Liberal City



Particularly relevant to the APT landscape of Korea.....


From being strategic sites for the implementation of neoliberal policy, cities may possibly become a new political arena for experiments in democracy—and thus require a new design. Designers continue to hold back with criticism and proposals, but the time has come to redefine the role of design in a social city—and to take action. Design in the context of cities could redefine itself as a search for an alternative urban practice, beyond the techniques and the ideology of crisis-ridden, late-capitalist urbanism
Jesko Fezer

see *-* full article -------> http://www.e-flux.com/journal/view/153

Tuesday 23 November 2010

Collaging parts of city

A collage of the exterior space of three APT complexes, exploring the repetition in the vertical and horizontal planes. The alternately intimidating and mundane character of these in between spaces.



Model




Reinterpret an APT as a series of landscapes with different textures and qualities. Investigating the wrapping of internal space, and the gap between the structure and the interior and the lack of subtle layering between conditions.

ChungWha





Ogin Apatu

Nestled deep within a in the foothills of the Namsan mountain, is the Ogin APT complex. This modern ruin is only accessible by 'village bus' even though it is in the centre of Seoul. In contrast to most of the complexes I have visited which have the familiar bustle of children, families and cars, this place was deadly quiet, un-populated, and actually very creepy.

In a curious reversal of the usual process of urban regeneration in Seoul where the new comes to replace the old, here the government has decided that these old (perhaps 50 years) are obstructing the view and access to nature, to namsan, and should be removed.

As they wait, emptied of life but full of possessions to be demolished to make way for a park, they are a reminder that these landscapes, which appear monolithic and permanent are actually incredibly fragile.




Sunday 21 November 2010

Quotidien skyline

"Untitled (Skyline)" 2007
My friend Aretousa recently pointed me towards the works of Kader Attia, a French artist of Algerian descent. He takes everyday consumer objects like fridges and transforms them into a very familiar, engulfing urban landscape, remeniscent of the concrete parisian banlieue where he grew up. He draws attention to their strange symmetries and de-humanising qualities, thereby highlighting the impact of such urbanism on peoples' lives and the oppressiveness of the political situation that has created them.

His work also talks about how Corb was influenced by the Architecture of North Africa, which in had a massive impact in turn on the failed urban projects of Paris and Algeria. This is encapsulated in photographs of a beach "Rochers Carrés", a beach covered with huge concrete block, where Algerian youth hang out. The beach represents the ultimate boundary between them and europe, and potentially dreams of a better life, whilst also making the connection between the hardships experienced by youth on both sides of the water.


"Rochers Carrés"

http://www.creativeafricanetwork.com/page/8626/en
http://www.balticmill.com/whatsOn/present/ExhibitionDetail.php?exhibID=84

Wednesday 10 November 2010

Poaching Women

I have been noticing that the visible population of the APTs consists mainly of women, children and old people. Given that I was visiting these places during the day, I assume that most of these women do not work. I was reminded of an interesting article about gender arbitrage my friend Kade recently sent me:
http://www.economist.com/node/17311877

So if 'Only 60% of female South Korean graduates aged between 25 and 64 are in work' 

and if 'The workplace may be sexist, but the education system is extremely meritocratic'

does that mean that the APT are populated by highly educated women who are unlikely to be in full time employment?  This puts an interesting spin on what Catrina mentioned to me our tutorial that these places are the 'mirror image' of the corporate world of the city...

Tuesday 9 November 2010

Contract Signing Day!

In a chilly KNUA classroom, the Seoul Satellites completed the contact signing process, in the presence of Robert and Catrina, Haewon, Stef, Ryul and Christian and of course the London FU via skype. To see my contract in more detail see the page above:


Friday 5 November 2010

That Other building

Keunrin Sengwhal Shiseol 큰린센괈힛설


I have noticed a building typology popping up in every APT complex i have visited. These rudimentary, doubled banked buildings are covered in signs, explicitly advertising their function, very much the Venturi ‘decorated shed’. The amount of dry cleaners, creches, grocers and doctors surgeries within these Keunsengs have been calculated according to a planning formula, no more, no less. According to an article by Kim Kwang Soo, ‘this type, namely a 3-4 storey building built within a 130 sqm-330 sqm lot for commercial purposes called ‘keunseng’ (neighborhood support facility) makes for 92.7% of all buildings within Seoul...(Korea-Germany Public Space Forum Journal 2005)

So according to this number, most of the buildings in Seoul have some kind of duty to respond to the needs of their neighborhood. But they seem to be exactly the opposite, outgrowths of a planning law, producing a noisy, dumb but powerful architectural type. 

Wednesday 3 November 2010

500 kinds of Kimchi

I recently read an interview with Cho Minsuk of Mass Studies. (http://www.massstudies.com/texts/index.html)He says there is a growing section of society that is demanding an alternative dwelling from the Seoul stacked APT.

There are two types of people who would want this: first, are the ultra wealthy, who do not use their homes as a means of investment...Instead of buying an apartment in Seoul, building an architect designed house in a place like the Heyri Art Valley is probably the worst thing to do with money, in terms of investment. These clients voluntarily ignore that economic reality in favor[sic] of other values they have.


He goes on to talk about why the Seoul’s landscape is so homogenous, and why Koreans like kimchi and (apartments) so much:

Kimchi and apartments are similar in the way that they work as systems. There are supposedly 500 kinds of Kimchi, and still more are being invented. Its because kinchi is not a completed entity but it is a system, a kind of matrix. On a Korean table, ‘bapsang’ where we put every dish on the table at once, kimchi is never the monument or main fature. It is not special, but essential. No Korean sets their meal without Kimchi. Its an addiction. On one table often there are a few kinds of kimchi and other variations like kimchi soup, kimchi pot, kimchi pancake and so on....repetition through variation...Thats why it becomes the most memorable thing without being special, even though there is special feature like bulgoggi on the same table....

But on an APT spread, you only ever get one kind of ‘kimchi’....what other kind of things could they potentially be pickled with?

Tuesday 2 November 2010

Changdeokgung palace: A Tactile Scale


After spending the vast majority of my time walking around the repetitious APT complexes, I felt it would be a good exercise to compare the everyday, utilitarian Seoul to  parts of the city that Koreans are actually proud of by visiting complexes of a very different type - its Royal Joseon Palaces.

To the east of Seoul’s palace of ‘shining happiness’ Gyeongbukgong is Changdeokgung, affectionately called the palace of the east. Although both were originally designed according the the principles of pungsu (feng shui) to have mountains behind and a stream infront, they feel very different. Changdeokgung seems to work organically within its natural setting, in contrast to the imposed axial harmony of the grand Palace.

A sense of relief is felt upon entering the East palace. The first threshold clearly marks the transition from the cluttered metropolis into a much calmer place. However, the city often remains in view, above the swooping eaves. Interestingly, this actually helps to locate oneself within the context, in contrast to the disorientating feeling inspired by the APT areas. Direct view lines give the grandest buildings preeminence, and oblique glances between courtyards tie together unrelated spaces. The movement of the ground place is used to subtly distinguish between outdoor spaces, and transitions are further marked with changes of paving material.

More than a collection of royal buildings, the palace feels like an ensemble of different outdoor rooms. Each ‘room’ will have a combination of buildings (some which are free standing, others built along the perimeter of the space) stone walls, natural features and hard landscaping. A sense of space - intimate, modest or grand is created through the careful (but not pedantic) arrangement of these elements.
Plan of servants quarters (right)

I spent a long time in the ‘Biwon’. Deep within this lush secret garden are the servants’ grounds. Stripped of the ornate decorations and vivid colour of the palace, these simple but dignified quarters capture the essence of traditional Korean domestic design.  The rooms are scaled according to the space that an average sized man can stretch out in (1 ‘pyeong’ is approximately 3m2). Architectural features like the placement of timber joists, or the use of steps, blocks and seats reinforce the transition between human and the building, inside and outside.



The architecture is defined by the roof and columns -  internal walls are somewhat immaterial and moveable. This allows a degree of flexibility as well as control over the external environment. The careful framing of the landscape beyond with windows actually indicates a subtle but firm control over the natural world. Instead of defining rooms by function, internal spaces have different atmospheres, created by their temperature, tactility and light conditions. My favourite space, the ‘Seonjanghe’ juxtaposes spaces with two contrasting characters - the living and sleeping spaces are lined in paper, and slightly smaller in scale with lower ceilings and windows. The gentle light creates a peaceful space, conducive to resting. Separated only by sliding wooden doors is the library space, that has a lofty exposed timber ceiling, polished wooden floors, intended to encourage scholarly behaviour.
Seonjanghe

Monday 1 November 2010

apartment sized pooch

Domesticated Dogs



Pocket Pool dog
thats zizzi, from brooklyn NY