Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Table, CountertopShinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, FacadeShinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Table, Chair, ShelvingShinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Glass, HandrailShinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - More Images+ 18

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Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Facade
© Joonhwan Yoon

Background. Located near the subway station of Myung-dong, the site faces two streets crossing that lead to large shopping blocks. This area was originated decades ago as a gathering space for makers and merchants and then has rapidly grown to a high-dense urban block loaded with a wide range of retails, restaurants, and stores that attract tourists and shoppers at all times.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade, Cityscape
© Joonhwan Yoon

Completed in 1992, the existing building had served the Shinhan Bank Myeongdong Station branch for almost thirty years until it was decided to undergo a regeneration and extension process in order to provide spaces that can well accommodate new banking systems and their facilities. Drapes. The gesture of hanging fabric, curtains, or drapes has long held special significance. It highlights one’s status or honours a space through the act of enveloping or shrouding, and it also raises the expectations of an observer concerning the area or object covered by a curtain. In this project, the curtain, represented by the envelope is a figurative device as well as a tool through which to distinguish the building from its surrounding atmosphere.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Joonhwan Yoon

By capturing the ever-changing nature of light and ways in which the space shifts accordingly, the gentle curves of the glass grant the building to its own particular character. When covering the building with this curtain, its height was raised by three stories towards the 10m-wide road, by one story when facing the 6m-wide road, and by two stories at the sliced corner. The various levels of this curtain, hiding or exposing the interior, were determined based on the size of the nearby buildings. Corners.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Table, Countertop
© Joonhwan Yoon

In much the same way La Chiesa di San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane in Rome, designed by Francesco Borromini provides meaningful respite in an urban context through its sculptures and fountains, buildings on the Myeongdong intersection, known for its high land prices, wield new promise in their provision of places of rest for citizens. Located at the junction between Myeongdong 8ga-gil and Myeongdong 10-gil, this building was appointed for expansion and renovation in 2018. At that time, the client wanted to increase the influx of people and provide financial information and various services by creating a building that would manifest a corporate identity at the centre of the commercial district.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Table, Chair, Shelving
© Joonhwan Yoon

Located at the corner of the street, the main entrance to the building is surrounded by concave glass walls and mirror-finished ceilings, which also feature landscaping and benches, staging a living room in the city in which people pause and take a rest at any time. Another entrance has been inserted into the two glass boxes, and this mass takes the shape of an independent volume due to the continuous mullions at the corners, the curved elevations on the upper reaches, and the way in which the shapes are segmented and treated. A Static Wave. When designing corrugated elevations, we paid attention to the ways in which curtains and cotton fabric sway, and to the soft and warm texture of the fabric.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Glass, Handrail
© Joonhwan Yoon
Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Image 20 of 23
Floor plan level 3
Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography
© Joonhwan Yoon

Rather than adopting a kinetic façade, which changes its shape as a part of the fluctuation in elevation, this revealed a ‘controlled complexity’ by capturing the beauty of the fabric at the moment of movement. This controlled complexity creates a building of intricate images by repeatedly installing modules composed of several curved types, but this also prompts the observer to remember the subject as a metaphor and a symbol rather than as a specific form. This façade, which is perceived as a shape that constantly changes while walking along the street, is coated with ceramic dot frits that gradually change in diameter.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Exterior Photography, Cityscape, Facade, Windows
© Joonhwan Yoon
Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Image 17 of 23
Detail
Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Exterior Photography, Facade
© Joonhwan Yoon

Dot frits shield the interior and exterior of the building and also add a texture like a soft cotton cloth casting light and shadow on a solid, cold glass surface. The Glass Module. The façade of the building, composed of a 41.52mm-thick insulating structure, possesses multiple layers, such as double glazing and argon gas, Low-E coating to block radiant heat, and dot frits for shading. After undergoing mock-up tests including reflection values and projection, a glass curtain of various layers was manufactured and constructed of 320 curved-glass modules of 14 types.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Joonhwan Yoon

The curtain wall frame that supports the two-dimensional curved glass modules is made of high-strength steel so as to reduce the cross-sectional dimensions of each member as much as possible, and the steel mullions that are 45mm-wide and of 150mm-length are manufactured by bending due to the nature of materials that are difficult to extrude. Variations. If you look up at the glass module from beneath, you can find a cross-section that has not yet been seen in elevations.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Interior Photography, Table, Windows, Chair
© Joonhwan Yoon

The super mirrored stainless steel that is the finish on the bottom of the module reveals surfaces with reflective properties and devises variation across the building’s exterior. When modules of the same curvature are vertically interlocked, this material creates shallow shadows of different widths of modules within a depth of 15cm. The length of the transom that supports the elevation also changes accordingly to 50mm or 100mm. The super mirrored stainless steel is exposed in larger areas at the corner of the building. It is attached under the canopy of the main entrance, which shows a wavelength of up to 76cm-wide, and this reflective material creates an elegant ceiling of the space for a public contribution.

Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Joonhwan Yoon

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Project location

Address:Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea

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About this office
Cite: "Shinhan EX:PACE / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco" 24 Jun 2021. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/963909/shinhan-ex-pace-atelier-ki-jun-kim-plus-studio-in-loco> ISSN 0719-8884

© Joonhwan Yoon

新韩银行EX:PACE店铺 / Atelier KI JUN KIM + Studio in Loco

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