Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies

Sweeping lengths of concrete create curving canopies around the perimeter of this golf clubhouse on South Korea’s Changseon Island by Seoul architecture firm Mass Studies (+ slideshow).

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

The clubhouse was designed by Mass Studies to provide dining and spa facilities for the South Cape Owner’s Club golf resort and it is located at the peak of a hill, where it benefits from panoramic views of the sea.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

Described by the architects as being like “a pair of bars bending outward”, the building’s plan comprises a pair of curving single-storey blocks that are both sheltered beneath one X-shaped roof.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

“The two curvatures of the building engage with specific moments of its immediate surroundings, hugging the existing context – the rocky hill to the east, and the vista out toward the cape to the west,” said the designers.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

The curving canopies follow the bowed walls of the two blocks, but also integrate a series of smooth folds that present dramatic changes between light and shadow.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

“From a distance, the appearance of the clubhouse reads horizontal, demure, and subtle,” explained the architects. “However, once in and around the clubhouse, one begins to have a dramatic experience through the perspectival exaggerations and the views framed by the illustrious canopy edges.”

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

The western arm of the building accommodates the dining areas. A banqueting hall and restaurant are positioned at opposite ends of the block, and both feature fully glazed facades that open out to terraces around the perimeter.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

In contrast with this transparent structure, the eastern wing of the clubhouse has an opaque concrete facade that maintains the privacy of club members using spa facilities, but brings light in through clerestory windows.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

Areas for men and women are divided between the two halves of the block, but both lead out to private outdoor pools offering views of either the coastline or the distant landscape.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

A patio is also sheltered beneath the roof to create an entrance for the clubhouse. There’s a skylight in the centre to allow daylight to filter into the space, while a pool of water is positioned directly underneath.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

Here’s a project description from Mass Studies:


Southcape Owner’s Club: Clubhouse

Located on Changseon Island in Namhae Province, at the southern tip of the Korean peninsula, is a resort development – the Southcape Owner’s Club – with several complexes that are strategically positioned throughout the dramatic topography of the archipelagic region.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

The apex of the resort is the Clubhouse, which in plan is essentially a pair of bars bending outward. The two curvatures of the building engage with specific moments of its immediate surroundings, hugging the existing context – the rocky hill to the east, and the vista out toward the cape to the west. Simultaneously, the composition of the curved masses allow the building to also embrace what is to the north and south – a grand entry round-about, and a remarkable ocean view to the south, respectively.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Yong-Kwan Kim

An open central zone is formed, anchoring the entire complex in a culmination of an impressive entrance patio under a sculptural open-roof, a reflection pool directly below, and a spectacular framed view of the South Sea. To the east are the more private spa facilities, and to the west, the more public restaurant, private dining, and event facilities.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Yong-Kwan Kim

There is a contrast that takes place, not only programmatically, but also in materiality – solid vs. transparent. The spa area is mostly designed as a closed mass, with a slightly open 1m clerestory running along the entire length of the solid exterior walls and roof, progressing to a fully open release at both ends of the volume, which allows for an outdoor terraced bath for both the men’s and women’s spas with views out to the South Sea and waters beyond the landscape to the north. The dining areas are all glass-clad with extended perimeter terraces to all sides, offering a sense of openness out to the waters and landscape.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Yong-Kwan Kim

The sculpted roof of the Clubhouse is derived through a geometric rigour driven by the systematic structural organisation, which is a response to the three-dimensionality of the natural context. The depth of the curved steel beams are revealed, as if it were a vacuum-formed white concrete membrane, where a series of vaulted concrete canopies ultimately form an x-shaped, exploded circle in plan.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Yong-Kwan Kim

The 3m canopies that outline the entire roof not only function as a shading device, but follow the overall architectural language, as the edge conditions change in direction, up and down, from the north to the south side of the building. It adds to the sensuous movements that are portrayed throughout the building.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

From a distance, whether from the deck of a boat afloat the South Sea, or from a distance in the rolling landscape of the island, the appearance of the Clubhouse read horizontal, demure, and subtle. However, once in and around the Clubhouse, one begins to have a dramatic experience through the perspectival exaggerations and the views framed by the illustrious canopy edges.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

The Southcape Owner’s Club Clubhouse is a seamless, continuous, and complete object in nature, with a shape in plan that creates a complex relationship with the surroundings, in rhyme with the ria coastline of the archipelagos that are unique to this region.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Kyungsub Shin

Type: Sports, Golf Clubhouse
Location: Namhae, Korea
Site Area: 23,066.16 sqm
Site Coverage Area: 7,955.98 sqm
Total Floor Area: 15,101.56 sqm
Building-to-Land Ratio: 34.49%
Floor Area Ratio: 20.39%
Building Scope: B2, 1F
Structure: RC, SC
Exterior Finish: White Exposed Concrete, Serpentino Classico, Travertine Navona, Broken Porcelain Tile
Interior Finish: Serpentino Classico, Travertine Navona, Solid Teak Wood, Venetian Stucco

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Photograph by Wan Soon Park

Architects: Mass Studies
Structural Engineer: Thekujo
MEP Engineer: HANA Consulting & Engineers
Civil/Geotechnical Engineer: Korean Geo-Consultants Co. Ltd.
Lighting Engineer: Newlite
Landscape design: Seo Ahn Landscape
Construction: HanmiGlobal Co. Ltd.
Client: Handsome Corp.

Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Site plan – click for larger image
Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Floor plan – click for larger image
Southcape golf clubhouse by Mass Studies features curving concrete canopies
Ceiling plan – click for larger image

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Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz Architects

Japanese studio Noiz Architects has created a colourless clubhouse in China with patterned walls, a jumble of doorways and a chandelier that mimics a starry sky.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz_8

Designed to house the events and meetings of a private Chinese company, the Zhengzhou Clubhouse is a two-storey building with a triangular plan that centres around a double-height atrium.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz_8

Surfaces and objects throughout the building are finished in shades of white, cream and grey. The only splashes of colour come from golden door handles and the occasional painting.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz_8

“To make a contrast with the busy building exterior and surroundings, we decided to make the interior palette as colourless as possible,” says Noiz Architects.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

A series of meeting rooms, dining areas and guest bedrooms wrap the central atrium, where an LED chandelier made from scores of glass beads hangs down from the centre of the ceiling.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

A selection of differently styled doorways lead through to each of these rooms and are intended to reference both historic and contemporary architecture from the west as well as the east. Some appear as three-dimensional forms, while others are created from printed outlines.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

“These images are intentionally treated as ‘fake’ information, and randomly mixed as 2D and 3D representations to provoke a unique experience between material and information, real and fake,” says the studio.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

Behind the doors, every room is surrounded by curved walls with a variety of textured wallpapers.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

Other additions include bespoke furniture pieces, from a smoothly curving bench to a glass table with its base shaped like  a cluster of little trees.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

Photography is by Kyle Yu.

Here’s some text from the architects:


Zhengzhou Clubhouse

A large private company based in China commissioned noiz to design a special clubhouse near their headquarters in Zhengzhou. The required program include VIP reception, meeting, dining, and recreational areas, as well as private suites for the owner and for guests of the company.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

The unique triangular shape of the existing floor plan and its core distribution restricted the design and functional layout, making it difficult to distribute rooms within a standard grid-geometry. Noiz decided to make the new plan as free-form as possible to flexibly accommodate the existing structure and requirement changes during the design period.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

To make a contrast with the busy building exterior and surroundings, we decided to make the interior palette as colourless as possible, making everything white to remove the sense of weight and ‘busy-ness” of the outside. However, within this all-white palette, we introduced a vivid variety of materiality and texture to express variation in space and atmosphere.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

Each room has a unique form, and each is given a different texture and pattern within the white palette. We carefully cataloged multiple material options for all surfaces – floor, wall, ceiling, furniture – and coordinated them while considering the various scales and functions of each room.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

The largest room is the main hall, with its double-height atrium; it doubles as a reception area and an event space. We treated the surface of the lower level ceiling as an upside-down landscape that flows continuously towards a large opening in the centre, like a hole in a golf course, deliberately punching through an uneven surface. A special LED chandelier installed at the upper level maintains a continuous flow to the lower level ceiling.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

We also introduced a set of gate/threshold using images of historic and contemporary styles throughout the rooms, compiled from various Eastern and Western references, in order to establish an off-beat sensibility and focal points in the overall space. These images are intentionally treated as ‘fake’ information, and randomly mixed as 2D and 3D representations to provoke a unique experience between material and information, real and fake.

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

Location: Zhenzhou, China
Client: Union Investment
Design: Aug. 2011–Nov. 2011
Construction: Nov. 2011–May. 2012
Building Type: Clubhouse (Interior)

Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz

Floor Area: 1,700 sqm
Construction Cost: About 2M USD (13M RMB)
Contractor: KeRui construction company
Furniture Manufacturer: Shanghai Fulin Funiture Company
Chandelier Maker: Fany-Mini Lighiting Company
Mechanical Engineering and Plumbing and Structural Engineering: TSC Engineers
Construction Management: People Tech Consulting

dezeen_Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz_51
Lower floor plan – click for larger image and key
Zhengzhou Clubhouse by Noiz
Upper floor plan – click for larger image and key

 

The post Zhengzhou Clubhouse
by Noiz Architects
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