The White Block Gallery is
a 1500 m2 exhibition and cultural space at the heart of the Heyri Art Valley in South Korea. A matrix of 3 solid
gallery volumes carefully positioned creates 7 additional galleries in a
compact but open ended configuration.
Designed to showcase global
contemporary art from super sized sculpture and paintings to multi-media
installations, the spaces are unique in proportion and lighting allowing curators
to accommodate new future forms of art and media.
Integration with the
landscape of the prominent lake-front site is also of crucial importance: The
result places the intense and controlled experience of art side-by-side with
informal social and landscape interactions.
Passive heating and
ventilation are integrated into the art house’s high efficiency environmental
systems and runoff control measures become part of the spatial experience of
art.
By carefully arranging the
massing of 3 solid gallery volumes, 7 more galleries are produced in the
interstitial spaces to create a total of 10 proportionally varied galleries.
The fritting pattern takes
on more figural volumes to create areas of privacy and publicity. The
shapes merge with the patterns of early morning fog. A functional space
of the fire stair becomes a main feature as a public viewing platform at the
building’s corner.
As the largest site in the Heyri Art
Valley, the aggregation
of solid and transparent boxes breaks down the overall scale of the
building. Each solid gallery box is thought of as a pavilion that is
either suspended above the landscape or placed on top of it.
The solid boxes capture
shadows of adjacent trees while the transparent boxes reflect the distant
landscape. A roofdeck on the lower ‘sitting box’ has extended views to the
natural surrounds. A compressed entry under the hovering ‘hanging box’ frames
views to the waterfront beyond.
The low space is
accentuated through the use of dark woods and in juxtaposition to the tall
‘supercore’ it connects to. The entry glass is the only curved moment in
the otherwise taut skin and allows one to occupy an ambiguous space between
inside and outside.
The ‘Supercore’ is an
organizational void space that mediates between the autonomy of each gallery
space and its connection to the surrounding landscape. A series of
bridges cross the space and become viewing platforms for artwork.
Project Team:
Jinhee Park AIA + John Hong
AIA, LEED (principals in charge), Frederick Peter Ortner, Donguk Lee, Jiseok
Park, Taesoo Kim, Christoph Schäfer, Juho Lee, Marcela Delgado, Soojung Rhee,
Aleta Budd, Okhyun Kim, Eli Allen, Jeff Niemasz, Eunkyoung Cho, Brian Vester,
Ryan Welch, Jeong Jun Song
Associate Architect: Dyne Architects
Structural Design: Matt Johnson, SGH Inc.
Structural Engineer: S+RC
Lighting Consultant: Project Concept K
Area: 1500 m2
Year: 2011
Photographs: Chang Kyun Kim
Associate Architect: Dyne Architects
Structural Design: Matt Johnson, SGH Inc.
Structural Engineer: S+RC
Lighting Consultant: Project Concept K
Area: 1500 m2
Year: 2011
Photographs: Chang Kyun Kim














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