gongsaido Stay / ATMOROUND
© Ki-Woong Hong
Share
Share
Or
https://www.archdaily.com/1012251/gongsaido-stay-atmoround
-
Area
Area of this architecture projectArea:
190 m² -
Year
Completion year of this architecture project
Year:
2023
-
Photographs
-
Manufacturers
Brands with products used in this architecture projectManufacturers: Younhyun Trading, koreabrick
© Ki-Woong Hong
A painting of the empty space. There is a gap between people. The distance or interval between one place and another exists everywhere. It can be a physical interval or a psychological distance. And the gap is needed for anyone anywhere.
© Ki-Woong HongPlan© Ki-Woong Hong
gongsaido is a stay in Namwon, the warmest southern village of Jeju. The design team ATMOROUND planned a six-wide folding screen in order to tell the story of a ‘gap’ defined by no one. In the interior space behind the minimal shape of the exterior frame, an exhibition for the six-wide folding screen is going on. The architectural framework had already been completed at the site where the design team first visited. The client wanted a space like a monochrome gallery with nothing decorative.
© Ki-Woong Hong
The design team imagined white concrete. The space of a white canvas becomes a background that embraces the beautiful changes of the surrounding nature. The main character here is nature. What was needed to express nature thoroughly was emptiness. The space itself becomes a white folding screen. The design team assumed it was a six-wide folding screen, considering the existing framework, and added natural elements that are most familiar to Jeju, such as stone, water, breath, earth, sky, and wind. They filled the six widths with these six natural elements, expressing the overall concept and branding of gongsaido.
© Ki-Woong Hong© Ki-Woong Hong
A customer can feel an unusual sense through a non-daily experience to stay and enjoy a gallery emptied by an artist going on a journey. In the long corridor inside, there are gallery tickets and pamphlets. The customer slowly looks around the space and follows the furniture and objects with a special concept according to the designer’s intention. There are canvases and tools in the living room that seem to have been used by the artist. Through unusual elements far from daily stimuli, such as the white cloth on the sofa covered by the artist before going on a long journey, a chair that feels like a mass sculpted by the artist rather than furniture, and the distance between object and object put in the air, we become to look into ourselves existing in it.
© Ki-Woong Hong
The ‘gap’ is an important concept here, between person and person, between space and space, between times when various people have stayed. That’s why this space is named ‘gongsaido’, which means “a picture of the empty gap.” The empty white space contains nature changing every moment and creates a street where cool winds come and go. What we need is such a gap.
© Ki-Woong Hong
Originally Appeared Here