This visitors centre for a mountain in South Korea by Namu Architects comprises a pair of gabled buildings with vertical cladding and windows, intended to reference the trunks of tall trees that surround the plot .

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

The CeongTae Mountain’s Visitor Data Center by JaeBum Myung of Seoul studio Namu Architects stands on the edge of a mountain forest in South Korea’s Gangwon Province.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

The centre comprises a pair of timber-clad buildings with pitched roofs. A single taller and longer than the other, they sit side by side and are linked by a small porch.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

The roofs are covered in grey tiles and pitched at the same angle as the Sudeoksa Daeungjeon, the major Buddhist temple in the region.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

Their timber eaves shelter prolonged stripes of glazing on the facade, and are left exposed across the interiors.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

“A gable roof is one particular of the most typical building varieties in agricultural villages,” explained Myung. “It has been utilized not only for Buddhist temples but also for storages and homes that have been unknown.”


Relevant story: Craggy concrete walls surround South Korean sculpture park by Archium


“Although supplies and development approaches have been transformed, the gable roof’s refreshing quality and strength are reproduced in this undertaking,” he additional. “The classic gable roof is utilized to contemporary interpretation by utilizing pre-lower publish and beam development.”

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

The outer walls of the developing are covered in planks of timber in varying tones, creating an “abstract painting of the forest”.

Prolonged vertical windows that run from the eaves to the ground break up the wooden cladding and give views into the adjacent stand of pine and fir trees.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

The buildings’ conventional gabled type and timber siding were selected to aid the new structures harmonise with the local architecture and appear “as one particular with the forest”.


Associated content: more architecture in South Korea


“The website is found in front of the forest that is total of coniferous trees like pine and fir trees,” explained the architect. “The trees grow straight towards the sky at irregular spots. These vertical rhythms of the internet site are adapted to the building’s elevation.”

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

Similarly, when Japanese architect Kengo Kuma designed a tourist information centre in Tokyo overlooking an ancient temple, he fragmented the structure into many house-shaped segments. Stacked one particular on leading of the other, the building aids to reduce the visual affect of the creating on its surroundings.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu Architects

Non-load-bearing walls subdivide the minimally decorated interior room, making it possible for for potential adaption. At present, offices, conference rooms and toilets occupy the ground floors of the two blocks, although the upper floor of the bigger creating includes staff accommodation.

Photography is by JaeBum Myung.

CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu ArchitectsInternet site strategy CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu ArchitectsGround floor program CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu ArchitectsFirst floor plan CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu ArchitectsLong part CeongTae Mountain's Visitor Information Center by Namu ArchitectsCross section Dezeen

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here