Selected Works 2011-2015

Page 1

Si m Yunhak Selected Works 2011 - 2015


YUNHAK SIM Email : yunhak0130@gmail.com Phone : +1 917 370 3349 207 W 109 st, Apt 3R New York, NY 10025

Profile “There is no other feeling that excites me more than when my sketches from a pencil become a real physical architecture”. This is my father’s saying and I was so moved by his words. Those words are my motivation to getting in Architecture.

Education Jun. 2014 - May. 2015

Columbia University, New York, NY

: Master of Science in Advanced Architectural Design

Aug. 2011 - Dec. 2013

Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL : B. Arch Honor with Summa Cum Laude

Feb. 2007 - Jun. 2014 Dual Degree with IIT

Hanyang University, S. Korea

Aug. 2013 - Dec. 2013 Study Abroad

IIT Paris

Aug. 2008 - Nov. 2008

National University of Singapore, Singapore

: B. Arch Honor with Summa Cum Laude

: An Participant for 2013 Fall semester

: An Exchange Student

Experience Dec. 2008 - Jan. 2009 Internship

Surbana International Consultants Pte Ltd

Feb. 2009 - Dec. 2010

Military Service, S. Korea

: Water-front project, Penang, Malaysia / Designed Residential units

: Worked at Human resource management in Engineer department

Nov. 2012

DETROIT by DESIGN 2012 - Detroit Riverfront Competition : International competition Entry / Project diagram works

Feb. 2014 - Apr. 2014 Internship

2

SAMOO Architects & Engineers , S.Korea : Making project modeland produce rendering images


Expertise Mar. 2007 - Current

Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign : Proficiency Level [advanced]

May. 2008 - Current

Auto CAD, Autodesk 3D Max, Revit, Ecotect : Proficiency Level [advanced]

Apr. 2011 - Current

Rhinoceros, Grasshopper

: Proficiency Level [advanced, intermediate]

Aug. 2012 - Current

IESVE

: Proficiency Level [intermediate]

Language

Bilingual in English and Korean + Chinese [intermediate]

Awards Aug. 2007 - Jun. 2014

Scholarship, Hanyang University : An excellent scholarly achievement

Aug. 2011 - Dec. 2013

College of Architecture Dean’s List, IIT : An excellent scholarly achievement

Mar. 2012

Samuel Horwitz Memorial Scholarship, IIT : Nominated, Boat House Project / 2011 Fall

Nov. 2012

Dean’s Choice and Track Winner, IIT

: Interprofessional Project (IPRO) / Project name : Ghost wire

May. 2013

Dean’s Choice by Wiel Arets, IIT

: Interprofessional Project (IPRO) / Project name : Flyash Brick

Activities Dec. 2008

End of year Exhibition, NUS

: The Abandoned Bridge project 2008 Fall

May. 2012 / 2013

Open House Exhibition, IIT

: Boat house / Monastery / Urban interfaith center

Jan. 2013

The Pilsen Equalizers Exhibition

: An intelligent Textile Cultural Center Exhibit in Pilsen, Chicago

Dec. 2013

Publication, IIT Paris

: A continuum flow: Urbanism, Architecture, and Human

3


A Continuum Flow :Urbanism, Architecture, and Human

4


01

Life+Scape

02

Aquatic Center

03

Barge Flotilla

04

Urban Interfaith Center

05

06

[ A place without an age barrier ]

[ Urban, social, air needs ]

[ Stimulus and Reaction ]

[ Joint to appear to be invisible ]

Collective Housing

[ Sequence of Collective Realms ]

Pilsen Textile Center

[ Urban-Communal Textile ]

07

Monastery

08

Boat House

09

[ 24 hours Rhythm ]

[ Harmony ]

Promenade

[ To the Great Lakes ]

5


Life Scape

A place where you can explore the world without an age barrier

New Generation + New Topography New York, NY PoPulatioN in 2010 & 2040 growth of NYC’s 65 aND over PoPulatioN

Advanced studio_Columbia University_2014 Fall Studio Professor_Markus Dochantschi

8.2 >>> 9 million

2.41

0.50

0.47

1.69

1.58

1.58

1.38

2.25

2.55

2.84

8.2 >>> 9 Million

Is New York a Place for RETIREMENT? For the project, I’m interested in an aging society which can change urban infrastructure and will keep deeply influencing our society. The title, Lifescape, is a narrative that details the intersection of events in an individual’s agency, emotions, health, cultural norms, and behaviours over their lifespan. Through several analysis of the City, I concluded that even thought, New York has affluent programs and infrastructure, it raises the issue of age segregation. Then, by locating the project on the center of NYC, this project is expected to play a role as a medium which clearly shows how our society is divided and segregated. The population of New York has continuously increased and will reach 9 million in 2040. In total, the population of the elderly will drastically increase over 1.4 million. Specifically, the elderly increase from 2005 to 2030, the number of New York citizens over 65 will reach 47% (922,000 to 1.35 million).

New York City Population Projection by Age/Sex & Borough, 2010-2040 / NYC Department of City Planning

6


7


6500 60 ~

9 -4

40

-59

50

30

-39

20-

29

10-19

0

1-9

Young

Middle

Old

Age Differentiated

Age Integrated

EDUCATION WORK LEISURE

8

In current age distribution pattern, Manhattan is the densest area with the age 65 and over. Many of them live near Central Park. In addition, over 6,500 old people are living in co-op city, Bronx in affordable housing. Old population are located on the outskirt of boroughs. In current system which is an age-differentiated society, you are educated when you are young, you work hard when you are middle age, you live leisurely when you get old. However, I’m proposing a new system of age integrated.


1.

Battery Park: High-Dense Green Brooklyn Bridge Park: Zoned Green Governors Island : Vacant Green (limited accessibility)

Revitalizing Green Connection - Energetic Green

Based on the analysis, I extract two main flows, Green and culture connections. This is green connection which makes a flow from Manhattan to Brooklyn through governor’s island. To be more specific, there are three valid nodes for green connection, Battery Park, Governor’s island, and Brooklyn Bridge Park.

The three nodes have different level of green. Battery Park has highdense green. In Governor’s Island, there are several programs. however, due to the limited accessibility most of parts remain vacant. Also, Brooklyn Bridge Park is designated as green zone by regulation but not yet developed.

Reacreation Facility Wheel Chair Skate Park Educational Facility

1.

Broadway St. + Wall St. - Bank, High-End Brand Shops - Open Space in front of buildings - Scale : Large

2.

Montague St. - Daily life related shops (restaurant, coffeeshops, nail, hair, supermarket) - Scale : Small

Also, there is culture connection which makes continuous flow from Wall street, the main street of Manhattan, to Montague street, Brooklyn. In terms of main commercial areas including Broadway, Wall St. and Montague St., most programs in Broadway, Wall St. is high-end shops and banks. Second, the scale is relatively bigger than Brooklyn.

Lastly, many open spaces are attached to major buildings without specific programs. On the contrary, Montague St. has more daily life based programs such as laundry, restaurant, coffee shops, etc. However, by going close to the Brooklyn’s downtown, the program becomes similar to Manhattan with scale and type of program. 9


10


In order to revitalize green connection, we add extreme programs including aquarium, jungle, diving pool which broaden range of experience in daily life. In this diagram, I want to integrate these programs to create continuous movement from Brooklyn downtown to Manhattan.

Not only connecting current commercial programs which have contrasting conditions in terms of age, but accomplishing to blur each commercial programs character with age-mixed programs including wheel chair Skate Park and club over all generation.

11


Lastly, the bridge connecting two bridges acts as a medium focusing more on the elderly. The aging society on this bridge show strong contrast with the city.

12


Tram Station

Parking

Gallery Skate Park Library Trambulin Structure Promenade Level 3

Department for the Aging Education Center Housing Garden Climbing Jungle Diving Pool Aquarium Level 2

Ferry Fishing / Farming Promenade Tram Station Swimming Pool Level 1

13


06:00 a.m.

04:00 a.m.

02:00 a.m.

12:00 a.m.

10:00 p.m.

08:00 p.m.

06:00 p.m.

04:00 p.m.

02:00 p.m.

12:00 p.m.

10:00 a.m.

08:00 a.m.

06:00 a.m.

As age-integrated society with education, work, and leisure, it is imperative to analyze the elderly’s daily schedule how they spend time and how this pattern of life is not balanced in terms of three categories. The time schedule above is balanced life patterns to the elderly. 14


This refers the route of daily schedule and the diagram above shows possible paths from one program to the others following slope system. Through daily schedule, people can choose programs on each categories through various ways on slope system. 15


DN

This refers the route of daily schedule and the diagram above shows possible paths from one program to the others following slope system. Through daily schedule, people can choose programs on each categories through various ways on slope system.

16


17


NEEDS, REACTION, and ACTIVATION : urban, social, air needs The Aquatic Center Brooklyn, NY Advanced studio_Columbia University_2014 Summer Studio Professor_Phu Hoang

urban needs

18

social needs

air needs

The Aquatic center is to react to various needs from the site conditions in terms of enhancing a publicity of the building and air right. Due to those factors of air flow and human activities within architectural programs, it is important to react to the site’s timebased air movement and programs with a park as a social condenser. The outdoor layers weaving those factors have an important role for people who can meet various events with visual connections through the architecture and park. Finally, responding urban conditions under time variations, the building dynamically activates not only architectural program itself, but also, urban riverside park for Dumbo neighborhood.


19


20

Scent travels on Air flow, merging the indoor and outdoor experience. People are made aware of their environments through the olfactory sense. The travels are resulted from air pressure: the force exerted on you by the weight of tiny particles of air. Although air molecules are invisible, they still have weight and take up space.


21


22


-5m level plan

OUT DOOR POOL

FLOATING DECK

FLOATING DECK -1M

-1M

LOUNGE DECK

0M

BRIDGE PARK 0M AIR PARK -5M

RECEPTION HALL -5M -5M

0M

0M 0M

LOUNGE DECK

The structure system is following parabola geometry as well as the building roof shape. The main girder members are following the outer line of roof and the beam members are linearly scheduled. In addition, the circulation is seperately planned to invite many visitors deeply into the Aquatic center and also, the divided path can allow to have mixture of events.

Ground level plan

23


components pressure

This chart refers the Air Delivery Devices based on air temperature, pressure, and combination of air temperature and pressure from small scale to mass scale. Through the usage of those devices, the Aquatic center can deliver the air itself from outside to inside or from inside to outside. In addition, the air can be delivered to ascend or descend through all space inside. Thus, without any artificial or mechanical system such as Heating, Ventilating, and Air Conditing (HVAC) system, the user of the aquatic center can inhale fresh air from the river. Also, the device can be harmonized with spatial programs where the air needs to be provided by using the strategies; transmiting, stacking, blocking, filtering, and penetrating. Each strategies can influence or change conventional typology of space and then, it will be able to suggest new typologies on this architecture.

programs + components to mass

temperature

combination

warm

-

-

-

transmiting

providing

stacking

filtering

blocking

penetrating

warm

+ +

warm

warm

Ascending change room

+

hall way

metro noise

cool

+

+

court yard

-

sound

cool

cool

light,scent tube (daytime)

swimming pool

+

cool

+

cool

+ +

warm

+ +

+

-

+

+

-

swimming pool

Descending

change room

change room

noise filter cool - -

-

-

-

warm

-

light,scent tube (night time) hot spa

SPIN ROOM

STUDIO

DRY LOUNGE

FFL 0.0 m

FFL 0.0 m

FFL -5.0 m

FFL -5.0 m

FFL -10.0 m

FFL -10.0 m

TOILET

STUDIO

24


25


Barge Flotilla Stimulus and Reaction Chicago River, Chicago, IL Summer studio_IIT_2013 Summer Studio Professor_Karla Sierralta

INDUSTRY PAINTING ARTIST

GREEN BARGE

CITY STIMULUS TO ART

BARGE STIMULUS

INDUSTRIAL

REACTION

PINGTOM PARK STIMULUS

REACTION

ART GALLERY(OPEN SPACE)

RIVER STIMULUS TO ART

MEDIA ARTIST

CITY STIMULUS TO COMMUNITY COMMUNITY

BENCH(OPEN SPACE)

RIVER STIMULUS TO COMMUNITY

BARGE

BARGE STIMULUS

INDUSTRIAL

STIMULUS / REACTION

PINGTOM PARK K STIMULUS

STIMULUS / REACTION

SCULPTURE ARTISTS

CITY STIMULUS TO WATER

WATER RIVER STIMULUS TO WATER PAVILLION

PLAZA SPLASH PAD

ART (PRIVATE)

BARGE

BARGE REACTION

COMMUNITY C (PUBLIC)

The Chicago River had been squeezed through the city infrastructure development. Even though they are trying to make or add infrastructure for the River, there is obvious limitation to extending the role of the River due to original infrastructure. Urban Flotilla is to be designed to for making adaptable and self-sufficient structure that will inhabit and navigate the Chicago River. The Flotilla will host a mix of civic, private and public programs. The barges will become a new typology for Chicago as a post-industrial city, and will promote and increased A between the river and Chicago’s visitors and inhabitants. Actually, Flotilla has lAots of potentiality to influence to city context, to extend their function and to connect different conditions between undeveloped area and growing area. Thus, it is important to respond/emphasize to the site conditions and affect/influence to the site depending on mooring sites.

26

STIMULUS

INDUSTRIAL

PINGTOM PARK REACTION

STIMULUS


27


Components MATERIALS

SPATIAL REQUIREMENT

SURFACE PATTERN_ARTIST TO COMMUNITY

MATERIALITY

ARTIST MEETING AR Working Space

: DIM LIGHT

Connection

: MIDDLE LIGHT

Pavillion

: DIM LIGHT ARTIST

MEDIA ARTIST

SPATIAL REQUIREMENT Working Space

CONNECTION

PAVILLION

SURFACE PATTERN_ARTIST TO COMMUNITY

METAL

MATERIALITY

: AMBIENT LIGHT

Connection

: MIDDLE LIGHT

Pavillion

: DIM LIGHT ARTIST

CONNECTION

PAVILLION

WOOD

ARTIST BARGE

SCULPTORS

SPATIAL REQUIREMENT Working Space

COMMUNITY BARGE

SURFACE PATTERN_ARTIST TO COMMUNITY

Connection

: DIM LIGHT

Pavillion

: DIM LIGHT ARTIST

BUCKINGHAM FOUNTAIN

LAKESHORE

FLOTILLA

MONROE HARBOR

N

The city of Chicago has developed River walks for revitalizing the Chicago River to provide accessibility to water. Moreover, the River is still required to play an imperative role of taking vigor back. This project consists of two barges which have Artist working space and Pavillion space. Each artists will be in charge of thier own pavillions which stimulate to community barge. Moerover, depending on the character of each programs, pattern of surface and spatial quality will be distinct.

28

MATERIALITY

: DIM LIGHT

SITE PLAN scale :NTD

CONNECTION

PAVILLION

METAL / WOOD


ROLE OF BARGES

PIER TYPE

THE BARGE IDENTITY ROLE OF BARGES

SIDE BY SIDE TYPE

CONFIGURATION

PIER TYPE

SIDE BY SIDE TYPE

LINEAR TYPE

INFLUENCE_Barge to Flotilla

RELATIONSHIP_Barge to Barge

CONNECTION_Flotilla to Barge

CONFIGURATION

N

SITE PLAN scale :NTD

INFLUENCE_Barge to Flotilla

RELATIONSHIP_Barge to Barge

29


CANOE LAUNCH CHICAGO RIVER SOUTH BRANCH

WATER TAXI

PINTOM PARK BARGE

PILSEN INDUSTRIAL AREA

SITE SECTION

INDUSTRY PAINTING ARTIST

GREEN BARGE

CITY STIMULUS TO ART

BARGE STIMULUS

INDUSTRIAL

REACTION

PINGTOM PARK STIMULUS

REACTION

ART GALLERY(OPEN SPACE)

RIVER STIMULUS TO ART

MEDIA ARTIST

CITY STIMULUS TO COMMUNITY COMMUNITY

BENCH(OPEN SPACE)

RIVER STIMULUS TO COMMUNITY

BARGE

BARGE STIMULUS

INDUSTRIAL

STIMULUS / REACTION

PINGTOM PARK K STIMULUS

STIMULUS / REACTION

SCULPTURE ARTISTS

CITY STIMULUS TO WATER

WATER RIVER STIMULUS TO WATER PAVILLION

PLAZA SPLASH PAD

ART (PRIVATE)

30

Barge Flotilla

BARGE

BARGE REACTION

COMMUNITY C (PUBLIC)

STIMULUS

INDUSTRIAL

PINGTOM PARK REACTION

STIMULUS

The terms, Stimulus and Reaction, are representing this project. Stimulus means the thing external that a rouses or incites to activity and Reaction is a response to stimulus. When the terms are being brought to architecture, we can say the terms as responding to the site or considering the local context with programs. Depending on which programs are responding with various external contexts, the proposed programs will be transformed and finally will be harmonized with the site.


DN

DN

3 B’

B 2 DN

1

1_ PAINTING ARTIST PAVILLION 2_ MEDIA ARTIST PAVILLION 3_ SCULPTOR ARTISTS PAVILLION COMMUNITY BARGE PLAN

DN

DN

4

1

A

5

2

6 A’

3 DN

DN

1_ PAINTING ARTIST WORKING SPACE 2_ RECEPTION 3_ MEETING SPACE 4_ MEDIA ARTIST WORKING SPACE 5_ SCULPTOR ARTISTS WORKING SPACE 6_ PLAZA ARTIST BARGE PLAN

1_ WATER TANK

1 B

N

1

SITE PLAN scale :NTD

B’

COMMUNITY BARGE SECTION

1_ WATER TANK

1 A

1

A’

ARTIST BARGE SECTION

Stimulus and Reaction

31


Urban Interfaith Center “Joint to appear to be invisible” Chicago, IL Advanced Design studio_IIT_2013 Spring Studio Professor_Ron Krueck_ Yugene Cha Featured project at IIT College of Architecture Open House and Graduation 2013

32


33


The project seeks to focus on the spatial problems: Modulation of space, amplification of light, resolution of scale, fullfillment of proportion, purpose of structure, and authenticity of material. The urban interfaith center is developed on a generic SouthEast corner site in Chicago, which corresponds to communal space, gallery, library, and meditation space. The project is developed to manipulate internal pressures that disrupt the original 30’ x 30’ structural grid. The final solution is to bring these forces into resolution retaining a harmonious composition. 34


+3rd Floor Plan : Meditation space (Top-right), Library space (Bottom)

+4th Floor Plan : Library space connecting with meditation space (Middle)

35


Collective Housing Sequence of Collective realms Paris, France Advanced Design studio_IIT Paris_2013 Fall Studio Professor_Andrew Schachman

36

Bus Stop

In between Private unit, Residential community, and Public realm Flaneur, as an urban explorer, is to stroll on a boulevard being fascinated by communal life which can provide various experiences in daily life. To be specific, the most important requirements for the development of communal space along a street are the functional and spatial preference for pedestrians over cars, a tight network of social interfaces, an environment shaped for humans’ needs, and engage with others, and a subtle balance between predictability and surprise, so that different sorts of activities can develop and coexist in the streetscape. However, the new paradigm of Modern architecture from the group, CIAM leaded to diminish communal space and to limit possibility to happen innumerable activities in city by presenting the standardization of urban conditions. As a result of that, the distance between dwellings, and dwellings and the urban public realm increased exponentially. Then, Flaneur may no longer enjoy atmosphere of street as they have felt before. These days, architecture should more mediate between the contemporary city and the public realm as the stage for everyday life. This project is to diminish the distance between dwellings and urban public realms and to design housing block as social arena.

M

M

M


WELCOME TO BERCY

M

SIM ARCHITECT

37


“The day to day happens on the street: an abundance of private everyday events converges in the public realms�

Converging into the society Individual Units Current Configuration

Residential Community

Social_Civic realms Residential Community Housing Units

Housing Option 1 Residential Community Housing Units C

Social_Civic realms

Society

Housing Option 2 R

Social_Civic realms

R

Housing Units C

C

Residential Community C

Housing Block

Street as a social arena

R R

R

R

R

C

C R

C

38

Private Space Bathroom and Bedroom R

Civic Realm as a artiststudio

R R

R

C

R M

C

Residential Community Kitchen and living room

R


M

DN DN

DN

B

DN UP UP UP

UP

UP

DN

UP

UP UP UP UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

DN

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

DN UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

DN

A UP

UP

DN

DN

UP

DN DN

DN

A’

DN

39

B’


Surface as Spatial Device Adjustable Unit P

R

SP

R

SP

W

P

C

C: Civic area R: Residence community W: Working Space SP: Semi-Public P: Private space

P

P

R

R

C

W

SP

SP

W

P

W

C

P

C

W

R

W

C

W R

P

P

C P

P

R

P

C

The Layer as a interface to communicate

Designing elevation as a exhibition space

40

Opening to residential community

HOUSE WARMING PARTY !


SCHACHMAN HOUSE 상어남

BON JOUR!

M

WE INVITE YOU !

41


Pilsen Textile Center Urban Communal Textile

Old Storage building Renovation project Chicago, IL Advanced Design studio_IIT_2012 Fall Studio Professor_Patricia Natke_Meggan Lux Featured project at an intelligent Textile Cultural Center Exhibition in Pilsen, Chicago

Green

Art

Continuously Weaved patches Community S. Halsted st.

Community Zone

S. Blue island Ave.

Parti

S. Sangamon st.

River

18th st.

Green

New Patch? CTA Pink line

Art & Commecial Zone

Art

Urban Textile

Community

River

S. Loomis st.

Urban Communal Textile

Community

This project is about making new urban textile in Pilsen, Chicago. As we well know, textile can be made with many patches which have their own atmospheres and in accordance with how patches are weaved the patterns of textile are changed by providing a variety of feeling. Also, urban condition is following it as same way in accordance with how urban districts (urban patches) are planned. Pilsen is cosidered as the unfinished textile since this area has a big gap between the east (art district) and the west (well developed community) side. Finally, by building the textile & cultural center serving various programs such as textile exhibition, street-art gallery and so on, it will play an important role to provide people in Pilsen with new vitality. 42

Art district

Urban Patch

18th st. S.Halsted st.

Infrastructure

Chicago River

S.Sangamon st.

Residential Industrial

Urban context


43


Two existing buildings

6

7

8

9

ART DISTRICT

+ Community TEXTILE

Weaved community

N

First Floor Plan 1_ Outdoor Street Art 2_ Culture center office 3_ Reception area 4_ Textile Exhibition 5_ Textile gallery office 6_ Engineer office 7_ Storage 8_Truck receiving 9_ Recycle 10_ Textile Manufacture 11_ M/E, Fire protection 12_ Plumbing 13_ Telephone room 14_ History Train

Reuse & expansion

GREEN ROOF

SECTION 2

VOID

1

10 5

4

2

SECTION 1 3

10

N

11

12

13

OLD RAILWAY

1 3 2

44

1_ Classrooms 2_ Cafeteria 3_ Conference room (Auditorium)


7

2

8

3

2

6

4 EL = + 33’-0”

OPEN TO TEXTILE MANUFACTURE BELOW

EL = + 14’-0”

VOID

5

5 OPEN TO FIRST FLOOR BELOW

EL = + 14’-0”

VOID

+ Education

+ Professional

Second Floor Plan

Third Floor Plan

OPEN TO STREET ART EDUCATION

OPEN TO FIRST FLOOR BELOW

1

1_ Street Art Education 2_ Art office 3_ Storage 4_ Cafe 5_ Cafeteria 6_ Auditorium 7_ Textile Education

1 7 EL = + 19’-0”

4

N

+ Sunday Market

1_ Street Art Studio 2_ Storage 3_ Gathering area 4_ Classromms 5_ Auditorium 6_ Textile Education 7_ Storage 8_ Storage

3 6

9

EL = + 19’-0”

N

+ Art Education

+Textile Exhibition

45


Monastery 24 hours Rhythm Columbus, IN Core Design studio_IIT_2012 Spring Studio Professor_Andy Tinucci Featured project at IIT College of Architecture Open House and Graduation 2012

Monastery has its own circadian rhythm. It means monks have 24 hours regular path on their life. This is the strict rule or schedule for approaching to god. In addition, each program of monastery has its own spatial hierarchy. Based on the time of day, the Rule of the monk directs them to various spaces within the Monastery, thereby WEAVING the processional circulation with the spatial quality of the Monastery. The corn field site for the Monastery is both private and beautiful. Because of its position on top of the hill, the corn field flows from and around the Monastery, providing a sense of continuity. To get these merits of the site, three parts of the original mass are extended to the site and some parts are visually connected with the site. As mentioned before, this monastery spaces are weaved by long paths. These paths can be hallway giving the feeling of procession and interacted with the spaces and the site view. Based on the character of each path, it must be reflected in its materiality. 46


47


1. CHURCH 2. LIBRARY 3. CHAPTER HOUSE

BEDTIMEGET UP 03:00 (MONK CELL)

02:00

16:00

SPACE HIERARCHY

09:00

14:00

03:00

15:00

7. BATH ROOM

02:00

16:00

01:00

17:00

8. ABBOT OFFICE 9. SACRITY 10. ABBOT CELL

18:00

00:00 18:00

19:00

20:00

21:00

22:00

23:00

12. MONK CELL

0

0

0

17:0

18:0

19:0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

10:0

11:0

12:0

13:0

14:0

15:0

16:0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

02:0

03:0

04:0

05:0

06:0

07:0

08:0

09:0

0

0

0

0

0

21:0

22:0

23:0

FLOOR PLAN

TIME

To Road

SPACE HIERARCHY

FIELD GOOD VIEW

17:30

CORN

PRAYER OR READING (SCRIPTORIUM)

MANUAL WORK (INDOOR AND OUTDOOR)

09:00

main entrance

THE SERVICE OF VESPERS A TIME OF PRAYER IN COMMUNITY AND DINNER (REFECTORY)

19:30

TIME

19 :00

COR

18 :00

15 :00

14 :00

N FIELD

16 :00

GOOD VIEW

17 :00

13 :00

12 :00

11 :00

10 :00

09 :00

08 :00

07 :00

03 :00

06 :00

05 :00

04 :00

01 :00

00 :00

02 :00

23 :00

22 :00

BEDTIME (MONK CELL)

12:00

EXT / LUNCH / REST / PRAYER / READING (REFECTORY)

21 :00

20:00

20 :00

THE SERVICE OF THE BEGINNING OF THE NIGHT

00:0

20:0

14:00

01:0

12:00

0

WEST

SEXT / LUNCH / REST / PRAYER / READING (REFECTORY)

N

SITE PLAN

14:00

To Road

CORN FIELD

MANUAL WORK OR AND OUTDOOR)

GOOD VIEW

main entrance

17:30

THE SERVICE OF VESPERS A TIME OF PRAYER IN COMMUNITY AND DINNER (REFECTORY)

12

19:30 20:00

BEDTIME (MONK CELL)

GOOD VIEW

RN

CO

FIELD

N

SITE PLAN

11

10

7

8

9

1

B’

B

UP

6

DN

Monastery has its own circadian rhythm. It means monks have 24 hours regular path on their life. This is the strict rule or schedule for approaching to god. In addition, each program of monastery has its own spatial hierarchy. Based on the time of day, the Rule of the monk directs them to various spaces within the Monastery, thereby WEAVING the processional circulation with the spatial quality of the Monastery.

DN

THE SERVICE OF THE BEGINNING OF THE NIGHT

N

11. INFIRMARY

REGULAR PATTERN OF LIFE

READING THE SERVICE OF THE MORNING(WORK) (SCRIPTORIUM)

THE SERVICE OF THE MORNING(WORK)

6. GUEST ROOM

SOUTH

00:00

06:30

12:00

13:00

04:00

06:15

E SERVICE OF LAUDS (MASS/CHURCH)

11:00

05:00

18:00

20:00

19:00

21:00

22:00

NORTH

06:30

PRAYER OR READING (SCRIPTORIUM)

LECTURE (CHAPTER ROOM)

18:00

WEST

THE NIGHT OFFICE, OR MATINS (MONK CELL)

05:00

00:00

06:15

THE SERVICE OF LAUDS (MASS/CHURCH)

12:00

17:00

REGULAR PATTERN OF LIFE

READING (SCRIPTORIUM)

00:00

03:15

5. CLOISTER

06:00

15:00

03:00

THE NIGHT OFFICE, OR MATINS (MONK CELL)

05:00

23:00

LECTURE (CHAPTER ROOM)

03:00

10:00

14:00

09:00

04:00

08:00

13:00

07:00

12:00

06:00

12:00

11:00

10:00

09:00

08:00

06:00

05:00

01:00

GET UP

EAST

SOUTH

NORTH

03:15

07:00

06:00

BEDTIME (MONK CELL)

A

4. REFECTORY

EAST

5

C

4

A’

48

C’


HALLWAY TO CHURCH CHURCH

A-A’ SECTIO

C-C’ SECTIO

49


Boat House Harmony

Chicago, IL Core Design studio_IIT_2011 Fall Studio Professor_Martin Klaschen Featured project at IIT College of Architecture Open House and Graduation 2012 + Storage Location

Professional + Social

+ Boat and People movement

+ Exterior view from the River

The Lincoln Park rowing club has grown beyond the capacity of their current facility and is looking to expand. The first phase for their expansion involves building a new boat storage facility on the north branch of the Chicago Rive in the Ravenswood neighborhood of Chicago. The facility must accommodate all varieties of crew boats and provide an efficient means of unloading boats and transporting them from the street to water and storage facility. These functional requirements shaped the overall form of the building. In addition, with the function of store many boat, the boat house needs to provide a education facility to teach people to row safely and to make a different kind of activity on the neighborhood. It means the boat house function serves both public community and rowers. Briefly, this project is considered as a harmony between social function and professional funtion. 50


51


+ Path diagram Connecting street to River

+ Zoning diagram Occupiable space for Storage

Social + Professional Ground Floor Plan

N

The Lincoln Park rowing club has grown beyond the capacity of their current facility and is looking to expand. The first phase for their expansion involves building a new boat storage facility on the north branch of the Chicago Rive in the Ravenswood neighborhood of Chicago. The facility must accommodate all varieties of crew boats and provide an efficient means of unloading boats and transporting them from the street to water and storage facility. These functional requirements shaped the overall form of the building. 52

1_ Boat club Storage 2_ Repair Bay 3_ Bath Room 4_ Social Area 5_ Class Room 6_ Private boat Storage 7_ Washing Area


Roof + Wall Detail 1_ Water-proof layer 2_ Thick Insulation 3_ Channel section steel 4_ Bolt connection 5_ Slanted Glass wall

LIATED FOOR

”2 = ”0 -’1 : ELACS

53


Promenade To the Great Lakes Detroit, Michigan DETROIT by DESIGN 2012 : Detroit Riverfront Competition

Urban: From aspect of urban master planning city’s heart is located in the center. The heart of urban planning becomes the key point of transportation system and becomes major thoroughfare. The current site is located at the heart of Detroit, the Great Lakes. The location is also located in the center of cities’ development plan. The Great Lakes is expected to be major water transportation infrastructure in near future. In response, the site will transform from major thoroughfare point into Esplanade. By locating promenade at the center of the city, security issue will be solved.

54

Architecture: Site consists of many different connections. Mover, monorail, bus, car, bicycle and walkway are composing the site. Major infrastructures of the city are planned according to the city grid system. Thus, the intention is to blend the existing infrastructures into an amalgamation. The proposal locates larger scale transportation at the top. Larger scale transportation refers to the mover, the monorail, bus, and car. The lower part of the proposal consists with human scale transportation and infrastructure which are bicycle path, walkways, and parks. By bring in larger scale transportation through consolidated approach from suburbia; the user may continue to move by human scale transportation system thus the site becomes eco-friendly.


55


Waterfront:

Great lake

Economical possiblity

Great Lakes megalopolis

To place the city’s hierarchy vertically city infrastructures are located at upper level while water infrastructures are located lower level of the proposal. Through such placement, the aquatic space relates to human scale which becomes cultural and leisure point. The Great Lakes is becoming major element of Detroit’s future development. The development will be publicizing through this proposal. Composing different types of marketplaces which relate to the Great Lake, industry will be vitalized.

Water traffic

Ground traffic

Green traffic

56


The basic element of the city is grid system. Detroit’s city planning was strictly based on such system.Thus rather breaking the order, the density of the city may be organized through this proposal. Altering the density of the city will maintain the city flow but will create a new space so the city may seek new transportation program.

The strict organization of Detroit’s urban planning system avoids any new elements. To generate a factor that may alter the system, surrounding infrastructure were gathered up by connecting time, space and memory. Conceivability of city and connection is resolved thought the memory of the space.

57


Si m Yunhak yunhak0130@gmail.com 207 W 109 st, Apt 3R NY 10025 +1 917 370 3349


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