|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Click
on images for larger views. Thanks to Masha for the head's
up on this project. [Google Earth link]
Ann
Demeulemeester is a Belgian fashion designer with a strong
Asian presence. Stores in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Seoul are the
only ones outside her native Antwerp. The latest shop in Seoul
by Mass
Studies is, according to the architects, "not meant
to be just another ‘object’ to be experienced
externally, but rather as a synthetic organism of nature and
artifice."
|
|
|
|
 |
|
While small in stature, and compatible
in scale to its neighbors in Seoul’s Gangnam district
, the building stands out with its living façade, composed
of a "geotextile planted with a herbaceous perennial."
Selective openings announce the first floor boutique
(the project's main space -- floor
plan), upper-floor restaurant, and a subterranean
retail space. The first and last are indicated by a stair
that boldly reaches out to the passer-by. Between the stair
and the shop is a parking strip, where the presence of steel
vehicles will be softened by the vegetative facade. |
|
|
|
 |
|
Overall the project could be
seen as one about softening. Not only is the façade
"living" but many corners are rounded as are the
window openings and the internal
space. Additionally, the rear
and sides are planted with a bamboo screen, in effect
cordoning off the building from its context. Where vegetation
can normally be seen as a means of continuity -- of surface,
underground processes, wildlife corridors, etc. -- here it
is used as a way to separate itself from its "plain"
neighbors. |
|
|
|
 |
|
If the softening of the vegetation
and the curving forms -- offset by the rectilinear box of the
main volume -- and the separation of the building from its context
is an intentional relationship drawn by the architects to the
fashion designer's work, it is not clear. The extensive glazing
does help put the clothes on display, though ultimately the
architecture displays an attitude, particularly towards the
environment though also towards the inhabitants. The spaces
are enveloping and embracing (womb like?), an effect reinforced
by the bamboo border and the building's living, breathing façade. |
| |
|
| |
| |
|
Click
on images below for larger views.
|
| |
|
|
|