PORTFOLIO HYOJIN LEE
CORNELL UNIVERSITY | M.ARCH
2011 - 2017
2 |
CONTENTS
All the images and texts of the book except the ones indicated are produced by Hyojin Lee.
Academic Projects Cornell University, Ithaca-New York, USA (2016 - ) Hongik University School of Architecture, Seoul, South Korea (2007 - 2012) École Spéciale d'Architecture, Paris, France (2011) SLOW BUILDING aging Basque gastronomic society & the ruin ORGANIZE-DISORGANIZE-REORGANIZE leisure space at Circo Massimo DATA MOUNTAIN coexistence of a data center and a thermal bath MALLI MARKET FACTORY urban diversity rehabilitation project
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Professional Works Architect, Ateliers Lion Seoul, Seoul, Korea (2013 - 2015) Design Assistant, Bjarke Ingels Group, Copenhagen, Denmark (2017) CAMOUFLAGED WC functional landscape architecture
CURTAIN KIOSK outdoor resting kiosk for visitors SANSAE-NEST residents community center for everyday life MECA maison de l’Économie Créative et de la Culture en Aquitaine BUKKEN BRUSE the BIG House boat renovation project
CV
| 3
ACADEMIC PROJECTS Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA (2016 ~ ) Hongik University, Seoul, South Korea(2007 - 2012) École Spéciale d'Architecture, Paris, France (2011)
4 |
TITLE
SLOW BUILDING aging Basque gastronomic society & the ruin
DATE
Fall 2017
INSTRUCTOR
Ruben Alcolea
TYPE
Individual Work
TITLE
ORGANIZE-DISORGANIZE-REORGANIZE leisure space at Circo Massimo, Rome
DATE
Fall 2011
INSTRUCTOR
Luca Galofaro, Mariabruna Fabrizi, Fosco Lucarelli
TYPE
Group work with Hyunduck Lee
TITLE
DATA MOUNTAIN coexistence of a data center and a data storage
DATE
Summer 2016
INSTRUCTOR
Tei Carpenter, Jesse Lecavalier
TYPE
Group work with Xiaoyan Dong, Ningxin Zhang
TITLE
MALLI MARKET FACTORY urban diversity rehabilitation project
DATE
Spring / Fall 2012 (11 months)
INSTRUCTOR
Juwon Kim, Hyunee Kim, Seonju Koo
TYPE
Individual Work, Thesis Project
| 5
01 SLOW BUILDING Aging Basque Gastronomic Society & the Ruin
6 |
ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL, 2017
Academic project | Individual Work Getaria, Basque County, Spain
The site is located in the city of Getaria, in the north coast of Spain, within a historical ruins and strong topography. The site holds a completely ruined and empty palace that overlooks the bay, side by side to a gothic church from the 14th century. The project had to respect the 4 walls and historical ruins and then add diverse programs – like Gastronomical society, municipal office and exhibition space– that requires new technologies, allowing the historical remains to be transformed for contemporary purposes.
Professor. Rubén Alcolea Fall, 2016 | Cornell University, USA
This project started with the discussion on the main issues of architecture within the context of the evolution of human culture through time, as well as strongly related to the culture of gastronomy. The aim of this project is to work closely to the everlasting, in opposition to very contemporary or perishable exercises of architecture, but without refusing the strength of contemporary formalizations. Therefore, the project is the result of thorough thinking on how the building and the program inside get aged smoothly together with the users.
SLOW BUILDING
| 7
THE WAY OF INTERVENTION
THE LIGHT, ABSTRACTION OF RUINS
PENETRATING THE OLD WALL
8 |
ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL, 2017
#1 THE WALL OF LIGHT
#2 DIFFERENTIATION | BRIGHTENING
#3 EXTRUSION | DARKENING
Based on the old structural traces of ruin, the following linear light wall will make people be aware of the existence of the ruins below from every floor, and feel the sense of belonging on the accumulated time layers of the site.
Since the ruin is divided to two parts, one for the mayor designated area to be preserved and another part without any regulation, the louvers for the later part would have lower height, and filter less light to make sure the existing vegetation grow up well.
To concentrate people's attention on the wall, the louvers on the central part will go deeper, to make sure the light on the boundaries are the brightest to lighten the walls, the mediator between the old ruin and the newly built part.
SLOW BUILDING
| 9
kitchen
restaurant
municipal office
projection room
RUIN & TH
10 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL, 2017
Admitting that the built environment is a persisting artifact of culture, the approach on this project had to be conscious and respectful but also ambitious and poetic. The variation of the skylight louvers gives different qualities of brightness for the parts of ruins, and also builds up a visual wall of the light coming down at certain moments of the day.
bar
MUSEUM ENTRANCE
HE WALLS
SLOW BUILDING | 11
< m u ent seum ran ce < m u ent nicip ran al ce
mu seu m
The kitchen that always has been hidden will be exposed on the central space of the building. With the dramatic natural illumination, people gracefully feel the accumulated time later of the slow-building. At the same time, it shows the slowcooking scenery to make people aware of the beauty of the process for both gastronomy and the coexistence of the old and new architecture. In this context, the concept of aging in architecture becomes capital, and the project reacts in terms of now, future and why not, forever.
gri terrlling ace
kitc hen
bar
kitc hen
<g s ast en ocie rono tra ty m ic nc e
12 |
ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL, 2017
restaurant
grilling terrace
kitchen
restaurant GASTRONOMIC SOCIETY ENTRANCE
municipal office MUNICIPAL OFFICE ENTRANCE
control room
projection room
restaurant
restaurant
municipal office
projection room
SLOW BUILDING
| 13
14 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL, 2017
3%
3%
1
Solar protection glazing : 6mm toughened glass + 16mm cavity + 8mm laminated safety glsss on steel glazing system
2
Custom aluminum frame
3
10/100 mm Structural steel frame
4
30 mm Ceramic tile 50mm Mortar 20 mm steel plate 100/150 mm steel structural steel frame
5
40/100 mm structural steel frame 10mm Weathering steel finishing
6
20mm Weathering steel handrail
7
Light fixture and track
8
Steel covering + Window frame
1 2 3
5
4 6
7 8
SLOW BUILDING | 15
16 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL, 2011
Academic project | Team Leader, Group work w/Hyun Lee
Professor. Luca Galofaro, Socks studio Fall, 2011 | Ecole Speciale d'Architecture, Paris, France
Circo Massimo, Rome, Italy
The topic of the design studio was to come up with one's own definition of 'Leisure' based on 'The end of work' by Jeremy Rifkin and to propose a new concept of leisure space within the Circo Massimo in Rome.
For the people in Rome, Circo Massimo has worked as a unique urban void for major national events such as soccer game cheers or memorial ceremonies. Therefore, rather than building a mega stru cture like a stadium, the project focused on
finding a flexible system that would allow people to use it as a daily leisure space while maintaining its original characteristics and also guaranteed 'empty space' for the nation.
02 ORGANIZE, DISORGANIZE, REORGANIZE A Study about the Leisure time, â&#x20AC;&#x153;End of the Work, Jeremy Rifkinâ&#x20AC;?
ORGANIZE, DISORGANIZE, REORGANIZE | 17
DEFINING THE TERM “LEISURE TIME" Admittedly, ‘Leisure’ means the all voluntary experiences which could be the motivation not directly related to work and household chores. Leisure could be meaningful since it’s not given time to one, really selectable time to all. So leisure can be regarded as a barometer that shows the real aspect of our society.
At this time, individuals can follow their own needs, leisure time contains authenticity.
nature, or sometimes the new collision which creates new social elements comes out.
In current society, complexity and diversity of different kinds of species don’t occur the union or conflict each other. They just become harmonized sustaining their own
BELOW : LEISURE SPACE PLAN BASED ON OUR DEFINITION scale 1/100
18 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL 2012
LEISURE SPACE IN 20 X 20M Expecting leisure’s role as a new social source at the first exercise we studied about the ancient leisure space, Roman bath. So by reorganizing the old leisure space which is very meaningful but disappeared with modern grammar, we could define the ideal spatial organization for leisure. What we wanted to deal with was, like the Caracalla Roman bath, leisure space where we can control and enjoy ourselves for sound body and mind. Everyone bathing around hot and cold water space could share social activities and communicate each other. In short, Leisure time include these characteristics below : choicable time respect for the diversity free-will participation personal & family units small social groups public LEFT : INSPIRED BY ‘ROMAN PUBLIC BATH’ - APPLYING IN CURRENT SOCIETY MODEL MAKING WITH HYUN LEE
1. private spaces 2. water promenade forest 3.meditation space 4. approach from common road 5. surrounded by forest 6. public foot bath MODEL MAKING WITH HYUN LEE
ORGANIZE, DISORGANIZE, REORGANIZE | 19
AN UNIQUE URBAN VOID IN ROME, CIRCO MASSIMO
Our given site Circo Massimo was the only urban void at Rome, Italy. Various social events (ex: national events, soccer cheering, religious ceremony, exhibitions were held in here, and there’s no place to replace this unique void space.But normally, the historical remain only acts as the track for promenade, jogging or even pathway. We intended to reactivate the flow that existed for thousands years, with our mobile mini leisure spaces to fulfill both common usages and special events of Circo Massimo.
#0 3M X 3M BASIC MOVING UNITS 3M X 3M BASIC MOVING UNITS We started with 3m x 3m units of small mobile structure to satisfy every different need of users. This is because we based on the concept of “diversified society”, and the leisure time is the matter of individual preference based on their life style for us.
#1 POSSIBILITIES OF AGGREGATIONS
#2 LINEAR COMBINATIONS
SEATS FOR AUDIENCES
PASSAGE
SEATS FOR AUDIENCES
PERFORMANCES
20 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL 2012
SEATS FOR CINEMA
CONCERT
SCREEN
SEATS FOR AUDIENCES
#3 POSSIBLE ACTIVITIES
DRAWN BY HYUN LEE
WEEKEND FLEA MARKET EACH CUBE CAN BE SMALL COMMERCIAL SPACE OR FACILITIES
FASHION EVENTS CREATING THE STAGE AND THE STANDS BOTH
EXHIBITION, LIBRARY EACH CUBE CAN BE CLUB SPACES FOR INDIVIDUAL NEEDS
AXONOMETRIC. RAILWAY USAGES EXAMPLE ORGANIZE, DISORGANIZE, REORGANIZE | 21
TRACK PLAN
CULTURAL FACILITY
PUBLIC PLACE
METRO
RESIDENTIAL AREA
22 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL 2012
PLAN scale 1/2500
CIRCO MASSIMO WITH MOBILE LEISURE SPACES I firmly believed the usability of our leisure spaces, that would finally lead the cultural flow of Rome. The new intervention of mobile leisure spaces will respond to the change of the times or needs. In order to apply grid railways on the site as much as possible, those should be on the same level. To reactivate tracks of Circo Massimo and path ways that Roman citizen is using now, we chose one level. Substracting sloped area and historical area on the site, we bound the area that can be used for railways ground. I decided the distance between railways by urban context. The closer area to the museum and metro railways have the narrower in-between distance. Giving tighter distance, they can support many variations for leisure activities so that it could make more valuable aggregations. As I deleted the rail of the middle area for big outdoor events, we gave one exceptional curved railway for special uses. I hope that it to link two separated areas and sometimes distinguish two of them.
TYPICAL USE DIAGRAM
DAILY USE
TWO BIG EVENTS
RUINS
ONE BIG EVENT
ONE BIG EVENT+ DAILY USE
ORGANIZE, DISORGANIZE, REORGANIZE | 23
THE MOVEABLE LEISURE CUBIC, WHICH SWITCHES FROM AN AREA FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL, A SMALL GROUP OR OTHER DIVERSE CHANGES, WILL TAKE THE ROLE OF LEADING NEW MOVEMENTS OF THE PLACE, DEPENDING ON THE SURROUNDING CONTEXT OF DIFFERENT TRACK DENSITIES.
24 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO FALL 2012
BASED ON OUR DEFINITION OF 'LEISURE TIME', THE PROJECT SUGGESTS THE LEISURE SPACE WHERE DIVERSIFIED LEISURE ACTIVITIES COEXIST. THIS CONDITION NOT ONLY MAKES ABUNDANT URBAN EXPERIENCE BUT ALSO ACT AS THE NEW STIMULUS THAT INFLUENCES SOCIAL AND CULTURAL PARTS OF URBAN LIFE.
AXONOMETRIC 2. BIRDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S EYE VIEW, AUTOCAD + RHINOCEROS
ORGANIZE, DISORGANIZE, REORGANIZE | 25
O3 DATA MOUNTAIN A monumental data space in Roosevelt island with thermal bath
26 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO SUMMER 2016
Academic project | Group Work of 3 New York, NY, USA
Professor. Tei Carpenter, Jesse Lecavalier Summer, 2016 | Cornell University, USA
"WE START BY THINKING THAT WE CAN 'SAVE' SOMETHING CALLED 'THE WORLD' 'OVER THERE', BUT END UP REALIZING THAT WE OURSELVES ARE IMPLICATED... DARK ECOLOGY UNDERMINES THE NATURALNESS OF THE STORIES WE TELL ABOUT HOW WE ARE INVOLVED IN NATURE." - TIMOTHY MORTON, THE ECOLOGICAL THOUGHT, 187.
The objective of the studio was exporing an expanded ieda of ecology that encompasses not just the natural envirionent but also recognizes the entanglements of humanmade products and byproducts within its definition. Our team has studied and developed of the Data Storage system, with combination of the thermal bath, which requires great amount of heat. Through the early researches, we were able to learn that data centers are huge energy consuming factories of this information age, and half of the whole energy were used for cooling system of it. Also, this project was an opportunity to re-imagine the spatial condition of a data storage center. Admittedely data storage centers are always presumed to be very introverted and defensive spaces. Public accessibility is almost always limited or prohibited for safety reasons. Reversely, we suggeted a ‘Data mountain with thermal bath’ on Roosevelt island. This monumental data space is the suggestion of combining heat emitting & heat required program together and furthermore, a the symbolic combination of informational infrastructure and physical social ground.
DATA MOUNTAIN | 27
#1 INITIAL APPROACH : THINKING ABOUT THE DATA STORAGE Through the researches, we have deduced that the key to reducing a data center’s energy consumption is to cool it with water. Furthermore, we thought that highgrade heat at the output can be used for such needs as heating building spaces. As one possible proposal, we imagined the thermal bath. By utilizing the abundant waste heat energy produced by data processing, bath can profit the heating cost.
#2 REINTERPRETATION OF THE TEMPLE OF DEATH
We approach the design of the project sectionally by adopting and reconfiguring Boullee’s drawing of the cenotaph. By introducing a series of programs, such as data storage center, thermal bath, public library and observatory, we try to give the section a new meaning. The “thermal bath” occupies the sphere space in the center of the “data mountain”, so the strong geometry makes it a figural object. While the data storage space, where all the servers, batteries, and utilities go, serves as the poche within the section.
THE TEMPLE OF DEATH (ÉTIENNE-LOUIS BOULLÉE)
28 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO SUMMER 2016
DATA MOUNTAIN | 29
DATA MOUNTAIN WITH THE SUBLIME Metaphorically, the project stands out as a “data mountain” on Roosevelt Island by manipulating the existing landscape. On the east side, the topography climbs gradually from the earth, creating a smooth slop transiting from the river to the “mountain top”.
While on the west side, the earthwork forms a canopy hovering over the vehicular traffic way and acts as a view deck towards the city of Manhattan. At the heart of the Mountain, the concept of “sublime” is achieved by replacing the heavy cap from Boullee’s original cenotaph
30 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO SUMMER 2016
with a grand “transparent Dome”. So the signals and lights of the servers and utilities from the data storage center can be revealed in such a way, creating an artificial “constellation” over the thermal bath.
Through this project, we examine the idea of how to introduce “publicness” and “sublime” into the existing technical spatial experience of data storage center, while at the same time be as sustainable and ecologically feasible as possible.
DATA MOUNTAIN | 31
" The diversity, of whatever kind, that is generated by cities rests on the fact that in cities so many people are so close together, and among them contain so many different tastes, skills, needs, supplies, and bees in their bonnets. " Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities
04 MALLI MARKET FACTORY
Urban diversity rehabilitation project
32 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO 2012
Academic project | Individual work
Professor. Juwon Kim, Hyunyi Kim
Yongsan-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea
Spring+Fall, 2012 | Hongik University, Seoul
Best Graduation work of the year / Architectural Alumni Fellowship Awards
PROJECT DESCRIPTION This project intended to suggest a paragon of rehabilitating the destroyed balance of urban diversity through the renovation of traditional market. The market, central purchasing facility for the residence areas, is also a public
area. I saw the market as the center of recovery for urban diversity and renovated the market buildings of the 1970s so that they could be coordinated with the surrounding residential, commercial and industrial programs.
CUMULATIVE CITY, SEOUL The city, where the old and the new coexist, is the cumulative outcome of a long period of time. Especially, Seoul is the city that has idiosyncratic chronicle, such as other-directed modernization by the Japanese colonial government, Korean War, rapid industrialization, and the process of urban renewal and expansion. Since the 1960s, Korean government implemented the demolition policy for the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s backwater areas. They
reconstructed the dilapidated areas without any reflection of former history and traces. Instead, they pursued modernization copying western countries through high-rise buildings and high-density development. These rootless construction booms begot a uniform set of huge modern buildings in Seoul. Some called it a start of urban regeneration method, but it was a merely violent method that lacks the sense of time and space.
HISTORIC LAYER OF EUROPEAN CITIES
HISTORIC LAYER OF SEOUL
SELECTED SITE To study rehabilitation of fragmented area of Seoul, I designated Cheongpa-dong area where the debris of tradition, modern times and the present day exist. Although the area was known as a residential area, plenty of small factories, mainly engaged in the printing industry and sewing industry, were filling up the ground floors of the residential buildings. These clusters have a long-time history and play a major role in the prosperity of industry. Unfortunately, the radical method of development based on historical flow, has changed the Cheongpa-dong area to totally different atmosphere, destroying collective local characteristic of it.
MALLI MARKET FACTORY | 33
CURRENT CONDITION
EXISTING PROGRAM & CIRCULATION MARKET PRINTING FACTORY SEWING FACTORY
Overwhelming Existency
GL.+16000
Among the small size buildings of the district, the two buildings of market and factory were overwhelming the passers-by due to these long and boring buildings.
GL.+13000
GL.+10000
The Road, point of conflict
The road between Mali market and the factory building was where the merchants, residents and the workers of small firms were conflicting. It was the road where children walk through after school, at the same time the fast motorcycles pass through to carry merchandise or to deliver goods.
GL.+7100
Excessive Expansion
The market’s excess spaces have been used as places where the people leave their surplus products, and parking lots for motorcycles.
GL.+3000
GL.±0
Neglected in-between spaces Because of the mergence of two buildings in 1980s, the structural in-between spaces have been neglected.
GL.-2900
34 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO 2012
THE RECOGNITIVE AREA OF MARKET IN LAW 1969~
1981~
2013 ~
Street type : the early market law
Building type : revised market law
Street + building type : recent law
The law designated both the building and surroundings as market space.
The market space only means "the building". To be recoginized as a market, it had to enlarge the area by occupying the building next.
Recently, the street type market can be registered as an admitted market space.
-
M AL IM AR KE T
PU BL IC
PL AC E
DE OK SA N
FA CT OR Y
2013 ~ : RENOVATION STRATEGY
E US O SH AS L G
added core
remaining mass
removed mass MALLI MARKET FACTORY | 35
Renovating the intricate spatial structure of market, small factories and the public passageway for residents is a solution to dissolve tangled time order and the arrangement of disparate programs. The commercials that were facing the dark interior space are moving toward the road and the lively place which is filled with passers-by. Due to the slope of the Cheongpa area, people was using the building as a passage, to access faster from their workplaces to homes. Making various access that make people pass through the building will give people valuable daily experiences by coming across the neighborhood.
36 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO 2012
MARKET LEVEL PLAN FACTORY AREA MARKET AREA
MALLI MARKET FACTORY | 37
PUBLIC PLACE, VIBRANCY THROUGH DIVERSITY AND CHANGE
By reducing the leftover market spaces which were being unnecessarily neglected, I was able to create a vibrant square in a rather narrow passageway. The road, which had been simply used as a get through passage way for citizens, would now provide lively daily scenery for those passing. I believe that this building is a new area of the city that reflected the change of time and the diverse demands of people and expect it to bring abundance to the daily lives of the people using it and also bring about a new turn around within the area.
38 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO 2012
MALLI MARKET FACTORY | 39
PLACENESS AND MATERIALITY The building has a concrete framework, but the predominant facade material is brick. Since 1970s, the long brick wall has been a reminiscent scenery and a thing of everyday experience. Newly added porous brick walls would act as an intermediator to harmonize the old red brick wall with the newly added transparent mass. Through the juxtaposition of brick walls that contain two different age, people would experience the scattered memory of the history, epitomize the story of the building, and discover its new meaning for their life.
1
4 1 10
10
CROSS SECTION scale 1/300
40 | ACADEMIC | ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN STUDIO 2012
1 3
0
1
10 m
2
2 1
10
MALLI MARKET FACTORY | 41
PROFESSIONAL WORKS Ateliers Lion Seoul, Seoul, Korea (2013 - 2015) Bjarke Ingels Group (2017) The first part of presented body of work is selected from my tenure at Ateliers Lion Seoul, located in Seoul. Three works are built projects. Design, visualization and technical drawings were all completed by myself. One is competition proposal. I was responsible for the unit design, facade design, and visualization of concept. The second part is consisted of the works selected from my design assistant experience at BIG, located in Copenhagen. For MECA , I was assisting the team by producing and organizing up-to-date drawing sets and studying design options. For Bukken Bruse, in a team of two, with construction senior architect and myself, I was in charge of design studies, communicating with construction site and detailed production drawings.
42 |
ATELIERS LION SEOUL TITLE
CAMOUFLAGED WC functional landscape architecture
DATE
May 2014 ~ June 2015 (13 months)
ROLE
Project Manager | design + construction supervision
PROGRAM
Public restroom
TITLE
CURTAIN KIOSK outdoor resting kiosk for visitors
DATE
November 2013 ~ December 2014 (12 months)
ROLE
Project Manager | design + construction supervision
PROGRAM
Kiosk
TITLE
SANSAE-NEST residents community center for everyday life
DATE
December 2013 ~ June 2015 (19 months)
ROLE
Project Manager | competition + design + construction supervision
PROGRAM
Community center
TITLE
MECA home for 3 cultural foundations
DATE
March 2017 ~ September 2015 (6 months)
ROLE
Design Assistant | drawing update, interior design study
PROGRAM
Cultural facility / office
TITLE
BUKKEN BRUSE the BIG house boat renovation project
DATE
June 2017 ~ December 2017 (7months)
ROLE
Design Assistant | design study, sd+dd drawing set
PROGRAM
Residence
BJARKE INGELS GROUP
| 43
01 CAMOUFLAGED WC functional landscape architecture
1
3
1 Women’s rest room 2 Men’s rest room 3 Utility room
2
4
5
4 Handicapped rest room (Women) 5 Handicapped rest room (Men)
1
44 | PROFESSIONAL | ATELIERS LION SEOUL 2014-2015
2
Professional project | Project Manager (schematic&construction drawings, construction supervision)
Supervisor : Sojin Lee Assisted by Jiho Hyun,Yong Kim
Jongno-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea
May 2014 - June 2015 | Ateliers Lion Seoul
We cannot imagine the life without going to the toilet everyday. This is why making better environment for our life space is essential to improve quality of our daily life, and the public architects are necessary. Providing a new public restroom for Chungwoon park was vital due to the lack of public facilities, and our goal to this task was concealing a delightful bathroom,
not revealing its sense of existence and not damaging the natural flow of the mountain. Despite emerging necessities for public restroom for strollers, nearby residents were opposing new construction to protect the spectacular scenery of mountain. Given the conflicting public opinions, this project tried to find the scenic harmony with the surrounding nature.
At the same time, the building provided sufficient natural lighting and ventilation, indispensable qualifications for public restroom, through skylights.
CAMOUFLAGED WC | 45
EXPOSED CONCRETE SKYLIGHT
GLASS LOUVER
COARSE GRAVEL GEOTEXTILE MAT, FLEECE
EXPOSED CONCRETE
ALUMINUM SHEET
POROUS BRICK WALL
IPE WOOD GEOTEXTILE MAT, FLEECE
STONE PAVING
SLOPE TO SIDE OF EXCAUVATION
COARSE GRAVEL
SECTION scale 1/40 46 | PROFESSIONAL | ATELIERS LION SEOUL 2014-2015
CAMOUFLAGED WC | 47
Seoul Design Foundation suggested series of 10 kiosks to vitalize the isolated outdoor space of Dongdaemun Design Plaza. Due to the locational benefit with water supply, we suggested the Cylinder Curtain Kiosk, which has a refreshing mist curtain in summer and a transparent vinyl curtain in winter to provide warm resting place for visitors. Circular form was chosen for the design to evade a sense of direction or coerciveness. This Curtain Kiosk would provide a familiar space for the public, alike to the pojangmacha or outdoor bars of Korea and act as a connector between DDP and the existing urban context near DDP.
WARMING VINYL CURTAIN PROTECTION AGAINST THE WIND
COOLING MIST CURTAIN MIST SPRINKLER + DRINKING WATER
48 | PROFESSIONAL | ATELIERS LION SEOUL 2014-2015
02 CURTAIN KIOSK Outdoor resting kiosk for visitors
Professional project | Project Manager (schematic&construction drawings, construction supervision)
Supervisor : Sojin Lee
DDP, Seoul, Republic of Korea
NOV 2014 - DEC 2015 | Ateliers Lion Seoul
CURTAIN KIOSK | 49
50 | PROFESSIONAL | ATELIERS LION SEOUL 2014-2015
THK 3mm STS' PLATE THK 3mm STS' PLATE STAINLESS STEEL PIPE 15 X 15 mm
WATER SUPPLY MIST SPRINKLER (SUMMER USE) THK 3mm STS' PLATE VINYL CURTAIN (WINTER USE) LED STRIP LAMP STRETCH CEILING SYSTEM
CANOPY DETAIL DRAWING scale 1/10
THK 3mm SUS PLATE STRETCH CEILING SYSTEM
STRETCH CEILING SYSTEM THK 3mm STS' PLATE
THK 10 mm TEMPERED GLASS
FLOOR (EXT-INT) RESINE POLYURETHANE
SECTION scale 1/50
CURTAIN KIOSK | 51
52 | PROFESSIONAL | ATELIERS LION SEOUL 2013-2015
Residents Community center for everyday life
03 SANSAE-NEST
Professional project | Project Manager (schematic&construction drawings, construction supervision)
Supervisor : Sojin Lee Assisted by Jiho Hyun,Yong Kim
Sansae-Village, Seoul, Republic of Korea
DEC 2013 - JUN 2015 | Ateliers Lion Seoul
An competition winning project, Sansae village community center integrates a typical hilly multi-housing district of Seoul. Already an excellent community, building a new structure within was a happy surprise for the people. My role for two years was to organize residents' miscellaneous requests into an efficient structure with a multipurpose space. Various programs for all ages such as cafĂŠ, public bath, study room, workshop, residence, and multi-use hall are planned.
KID'S PLAYGROUND
BACK GARDEN
CAFE
ROAD
Through the new village community center, an ivory brick building harmonizing yet different from the surrounding red brick buildings, I hoped to provide a delightful change for the people living in the shanty areas who were living in a trite surrounding of buildings.
SANSAE-NEST | 53
STAIRCASE AS A HALL | SKIP-FLOOR STRUCTURE The resident's community has requested 9 different programs for a three-floor structure in a site area of 160 square meters.
The way of minimizing hallway space in the structure, which was on the slope land, was to use "Skip-floor structure" in order to utilize the stair itself as the hall.
PHOTO COPYRIGHT : YOUSUB SONG
Guest house
Office Multi-use hall
W.C. Study room
Workshop
Kid's playground
Cafe
Public bath
54 | PROFESSIONAL | ATELIERS LION SEOUL 2013-2015
HARMONIZE THE NEW AND SURROUNDING The Sansae village Community Center is the tallest building in the village, and due to its hilly location the building was endowed with an extraordinary picturesque scnery.
Since neighbors refused to show their rooftop to strangers, we designed a frame to show selective scenes of mountain and the distant view of the village.
Guest Kitchen house Study room
Kid's space
Multi-use hall
Workshop
Cafe
Public bath
PHOTO COPYRIGHT : YOUSUB SONG
SANSAE-NEST | 55
IMAGE COPYRIGHT | BJARKE INGELS GROUP
04 MÉCA home for 3 cultural foundations
Professional project | Design Assistant - Setting the rules for interior ceilings / walls with required technical elements - Design study for Interior material in both 3d,2d - Design study for furniture layout / form - Produced up-to-date drawings for ongoing construction site need Bordeaux, France
56 | PROFESSIONAL | BJARKE INGELS GROUP
MECA is a combined new home for visual arts organisation FRAC, performing arts centre the OARA and literature/movie organisation the ECLA.
Supervisor : Jakob Sand Laurent de Carnière Ivan Mata (Freaks) MAR - SEP 2017 | Bjarke Ingels Group
05 BUKKEN BRUSE The BIG Houseboat renovation project
Professional project | Design Assistant - Produced set of schematic drawings based on actual measurement of site - Design study for wall/insulation detailed constructions in 2D, 3D - Communicating with collaborators for design development - Assisted construction site supervision
Supervisor : Bjarke Ingels Finn Nørkjær Dag Præstegaard JUN - DEC 2017 | Bjarke Ingels Group
Copenhagen, Denmark
A private house boat, Bukken Bruse is a fast paced project as it had only a year and 5 months from the first design approach to the end of the construction. In a small team of two, we had to produce the design studies to test our idea and also examin the idea through the detail drawings and site condition simultaneously.
The boat is consisted of 3 parts: - Basement Hull with a huge circular skylight - Ground deck/Mezzanine for living/dining - Newly added Upper deck glass box structured with two beams for private bedroom
Respecting its original form, the architectural intervention of the boat will be held in a very delicate, but with a distinctive interpretation of the maritime settlement.
PROFESSIONAL | BJARKE INGELS GROUP | 57
DRAWING + COLLAGES
58 | MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS | 59
DIGITAL DESIGNS
60 | MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS | 61
OTHER PROFESSIONAL WORKS
62 | MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS | 63
Hyojin Lee 312 COLLEGE AVENUE APT205, ITHACA, NY, USA 14850 CONTACT | +1. 718.687.6917 E MAIL | HL2252@CORNELL.EDU
EDUCATION
Cornell University / Ithaca - New York, USA Master of Architecture II 2016 - May 2018 Hongik University, Seoul / South Korea Bachelor of Architecture 2007 - 2013 Ă&#x2030;cole SpĂŠciale d'Architecture / Paris, France Exchange Student August - December 2011
EMPLOYMENT
Bjarke Ingels Group / Copenhagen, Denmark Design Assistant ( March 2017 - December 2017 ) - Bukken Bruse, the BIG Boat renovation : Developed the scheme by producing construction drawings, Visualising images and communicating with collaborators - MECA, Centre for 3 French cultural organisations : CD / Producing option studies for the construction
Ateliers Lion Seoul / Seoul, South Korea Project Manager ( January 2013 - June 2015 ) - Hired as a project manager for the design and construction supervision of 3 projects - Coordinated the design process, developed all details and supervised the construction - Participated in design teams for both national and international projects Doojin Hwang Architects / Seoul, South Korea Architectural Intern ( November 2010 - January 2011 ) - The West Village : model making, 3d modeling, drawing works Metropolitan Architecture Research Unit / Seoul, South Korea Architectural Intern ( April 2011 ) - Heyri no.8. Bridge : panel & model work for the exhibition Samoo Architects & Engineers / Seoul, South Korea Architectural Intern ( January - February 2008 ) - Hospital design team assistant
64 | CV
HONORS
ACTIVITIES
SOFTWARE SKILLS
LANGUAGE SKILLS
TRAVELS
The Helen Fagan Tyler Graduate Fellowship in Architecture Fund, Cornell University, NY (2016) The Architecture Alumni Fellowship, Hongik University, Seoul, (2012) Hongik Scholarship for Academic honors, Hongik Univ. (2008)
Freelance Designer at Local Design Movement (2015) Volunteer Worker, Memorial project for Sewol Ferry victims (2014) The board member of Hongik Univ. Graduation Exhibition (2012) AA Summer Visiting School Workshop, Singapore (2010) W.H.A.T., Architecture study society at Hongik Univ. (2010 - 2013) Volunteer helper for foreign students at Hongik University (2009 - 2012) Writer at Botongzine, Architectural online magazine (2010 - 2013)
Advanced Intermediate
Autocad, Rhinoceros, V-ray, Sketchup Adobe Design Suite (Photoshop, Illustrator, Indesign) Microsoft Powerpoint, Word, Excel Processing, Grasshopper, Python
Korean (Native) English (Professional working proficiency - iBT TOEFL 106) Japanese (Limited working proficiency) French (Elementary proficiency - DELF A2)
Asia
Korea Domestic tour, Japan (Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Kobe, Awaji, Awaji, Nagasaki, Sapporo),
Thailand (Bangkok, Chiangmai), China (Shanghai), Singapore
Europe
France (Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Ă&#x2030;veux, Nice, Avignon, Arles, Firminy),
Denmark(Copenhagen, Aarhus), Germany (Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg)
Spain (Barcelona, Madrid, Bilbao, San Sebastian, Pamplona, Getaria, Segovia),
Swiss (Lausanne, Basel, Zurich, Vals, Interlaken, Bern, Luzern),
Italy (Roma, Firenze, Venezia, Milano, Napoli, Pompei),
Iceland (Rejkavik), Portugal(Lisbon, Porto),
Bulgaria(Sofia), Austria (Wien, Zalsburg), England (London)
USA
New York, Washington DC, San Diego, Chicago, Boston, Exeter
CV | 65
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED â&#x201C;&#x2019; 2017 HYOJIN LEE. +1.718.687.6917 HL2252@cornell.edu