ARC River Culture Pavilion by Asymptote

Our second story this week from New York studio Asymptote features a silver pillow-clad pavilion that was installed on an artificial river peninsula in South Korea as part of the World Expo 2012 (+ slideshow).

ARC River Culture Pavillion by Asymptote

Located beside the river in Daugu, the ARC River Culture Pavilion was one of the Four River Pavilions at the international fair. Each pavilion presented an exhibition on the Four River Restoration Project, an initiative that seeks to preserve the ecosystems of the rivers Han, Nakdong, Geum and Yeong San.

ARC River Culture Pavillion by Asymptote

Asymptote designed an bowl-shaped structure clad in ETFE plastic pillows, which give a quilted texture and silvery colour to the exterior walls.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote

The building sits at the peak of a man-made hill. Visitors enter through a underground tunnel that leads through to exhibition galleries both above and below ground.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote

The main exhibition space features a 60-metre-long projection screen, which allows moving imagery to surround the space.

“While the exterior of the ETFE clad structure captures the quality of the changing light with the open sky and river landscape as backdrop, the darkened and hermetic interior of the main structure houses an immersive multimedia environment illuminated only by projections of the abstracted and re-conceptualised qualities of the surrounding site,” said the architects.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote

The roof of the building accommodates a large observation deck, featuring a cafe and a reflective pool of water.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote

“The architecture enables the visitor’s experience to be an alternating play between a ‘real’ experience of the water, sky and landscape that surrounds the building, and a virtual experience as presented through multimedia,” added the architects.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote

Asymptote more recently unveiled proposals for a faceted performing arts centre, also in South Korea. See more architecture by Asymptote »

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote

Other recent projects from South Korea include a mixed-use building that looks like a stack of shop windows in Gangnam and an apartment block in Seoul with perforated brick walls.

Here’s a project description from Asymptote:


The ARC – River Culture Multimedia Theatre Pavilion

The architecture of the River Culture Pavilion (ARC) is an powerful formal statement that combines nature, technology and space. The bold curved form of the ARC is perched on a peninsula that juts into the river and surrounded by an awe-inspiring natural environment. The building is a strong focal point set against a stunning panoramic landscape. The architecture is comprised of a vessel-shaped form that is clad in silver fritted ETFE pillows that through a play of transparency and geometry creates an ephemeral effect.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote
Cross section – click for larger image

This atmospheric quality of the building enclosure is heightened by light reflections from shallow pool of water that surrounds the base. While the visible portion of the building sits atop an artificially formed landscape, the exhibition gallery concealed below is the space through which the visitors enter. While the exterior of the ETFE clad structure captures the quality of the changing light with the open sky and river landscape as backdrop, the darkened and hermetic interior of the main structure houses an immersive multimedia environment illuminated only by projections of the abstracted and re-conceptualised qualities of the surrounding site. The architecture enables the visitor’s experience to be an alternating play between a ‘real’ experience of the water, sky and landscape that surrounds the building, and a virtual experience as presented through multimedia. This experience culminates on the roof where a large reflecting pond reflects the sky and an observation terrace enables the visitor to overlook the site and its natural surroundings from yet another perspective.

ARC River Pavillion by Asymptote
Exploded isometric diagram – click for larger image

Completed: June 2012
Size: 3,200 m2
Location: Daegu, South Korea
Architect: Asymptote Architecture
Design Principlas: Hani Rashid, Lise Anne Couture
Project Directors: Josh Dannenberg, John Guida Design Team: Brian Deluna, Duho Choi
Allison Austin, Rebecca Caillouet, Gabriel Huerta,
John Hsu, Susan Kim, Ryan Macyauski, Yun Shi, Penghan Wu, Hong Min Kim
Client: Kwater Korea
Local Architect: EGA Seoul
Structural Engineer: Knippers Helbrig Stuttgard

The post ARC River Culture Pavilion
by Asymptote
appeared first on Dezeen.

Sejong Center for Performing Arts by Asymptote

New York studio Asymptote has designed a faceted performing arts centre for South Korea that references the curved rooftops of ancient Buddhist temples and pavilions (+ slideshow).

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote

Proposed for a site that connects the city of Sejong with a park and river, the Sejong Center for Performing Arts is designed by Asymptote as an asymmetric building accommodating a grand auditorium, a small theatre and a cinema.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote

The architects combined a series of flat and curved surfaces to generate the multi-faceted form of the building, intended to relate to various Korean architectural styles.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote

“By confronting different aspects of the site the architecture sets out to capture the city’s vitality and history, by alluding tectonically to the spirit and flavours of local Korean architectural traditions,” said the architects. “The curved and mathematically precise roofs of nearby pavilions and temples are quoted here and set against the stoic solidity of traditional monumental buildings.”

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote

Some of the exterior walls will integrate outdoor cinema screens, while a glass facade will function as a huge shop window to present some of the theatrical activities taking place inside.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote

Entrances are to be positioned on the east and west elevations, creating a lobby that cuts through the centre of the structure. This axis will lead directly to cafes, ticket desks and waiting areas.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote

Asymptote is led by architects Hani Rashid and Lise Anne Couture. Past projects by the firm include a hotel that straddles a race track in Abu Dhabi. See more architecture by Asymptote »

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote
Concept diagram

Here’s more information from the architects:


Sejong Center for Performing Arts

Asymptote’s design for a new centre of performing arts for the city of Sejong in South Korea celebrates the city’s emergence and growth as a place of stature and culture. The proposal calls for an architecture centred around notions of contemporary urbanism as expressed through a distinctive and unique envelope and object-bulling perched on an open site that connects the city, a park and nearby waterway. By confronting different aspects of the site the architecture sets out to capture the city’s vitality and history by alluding tectonically to the spirit and flavours of local Korean architectural traditions. The curved and mathematically precise roofs of nearby pavilions and temples are quoted here and set against the stoic solidity of traditional monumental buildings also part of the surroundings.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote
Lower floor plan – click for larger image

The new Sejong arts centre is designed to seamlessly connect to the city fabric where the two main entrances to the building are placed along an east-west axis that cuts diagonally across the site. As this axis passes through the building’s interior it connects the upper foyer of the arts centre with the city centre to the west and the riverside park and museum district to the east. The treatment of the main urban facade as a large multi-story glass expanse creates a theatrical display and show window into the world of performance and theatre. With its intricate patterns of louvres the facade performs environmentally as well as aesthetically providing a compelling and dramatic backdrop to the exterior public space that it overlooks.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote
Upper floor plan – click for larger image

The interiors are designed to make for a theatrical setting for the audiences gathering and using the buildings spaces. Two theatres and nested into the buildings interior as well as cafes, reception and waiting areas cinemas and other functions. The notion of bundling and ‘packing’ the buildings function into a singular experience and form allows for both utility and a powerful and ‘episodic’ interiority and experience. The New Sejong Performing Art Center is a centrepiece for the city, a gathering place of history, contemporary culture, performance and spectacle.

Sejong Performing Arts Center by Asymptote
3D sectional diagram

Date: 2013
Size: 15,000 sqm
Location: Sejong, South Korea
Architect: Asymptote Architecture
Design Partners: Hani Rashid, Lise Anne Couture
Project Director: John Guida
Design Team: Danny Abalos, Bika Rebek, Du Ho Choi, Hong Min Kim, Project Team” Matthew Slattery, Valentina Soana, Mu Jung Kang,
Client: Multifunctional Administrative City Construction Agency (MACCA) Local Architect: EGA Seoul Structural Engineer: Knippers Helbig Stuttgart- New York
Environmental Design: Transsolar Inc. New York

The post Sejong Center for Performing Arts
by Asymptote
appeared first on Dezeen.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Here’s a proposal by Asymptote Architecture for a port terminal in the city of Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

The New York architects designed the scheme for the Kaohsiung Port Terminal competition, which was won by by Reiser + Umemoto (see our earlier story).

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Asymptote’s design features two towers with a terminal hall suspended between them.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

This hall provides shade and shelter for a public plaza below.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

All our stories on Asymptote »

Here are some more details from the architects:


Asymptote Architecture – Kaohsiung Port Terminal

The new Kaohsiung Marine Gateway Terminal designed by Asymptote is a new state of the art transportation interchange, an urban destination with both terminal and public facilities including exhibition and event spaces for the people of Kaohsiung as well as for national and international visitors. The project transforms the site from its industrial roots into a dynamic urban hub and a global gateway that bring a powerful and electric experience to the city 24 hours a day.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

The port terminal as envisioned by Asymptote is designed to invigorate and activate Kaohsiung’s city edge at the water. The port terminal extends the urban realm from the center of Kaohsiung to the city’s waterfront and connects this new urban space with the vitality of the future Pop Music Center and other public recreational and commercial activities that are to be located along the planned park at water’s edge.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

Key components of Asymptote’s design are two elegant towers, a sculptural terminal hall that is framed and hovers in an elevated position between them, and a plinth below that connects the towers and accommodates a new public urban space. This open plaza is an articulated yet continuous public space that is located at the very intersection of circulation paths that seamlessly draw the urban space of Kaohsiung into the heart of the project through to the water’s edge and back towards the city.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

These provide access to a number of important public spaces and programs as well as contribute to the dramatic entry sequence to the port facilities. This intertwining of public and private access as well as programming creates an activated public realm, providing a unique experience to ship passengers and city dwellers alike.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

The curved form of the terminal hall sits delicately yet majestically above the large open plaza activated by the flow of people moving back and forth between the harbor and the city. From the city, the terminal forms an urban scaled aperture that frames the harbor and water beyond. The sculpted underside of the floating building provides shelter to the urban space from the strong sun and seasonal rains while at night it provides dramatic illumination for the ongoing public activities, events and celebrations.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

The interior of the terminal building provides a spectacular culmination; a soaring vertical space naturally lit from above leads up to the large clear span of the terminal hall with sweeping panoramas of the City and the Kaohsiung skyline on one side and of the Sea, the sky and the horizon on the other.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

These are experienced within a dramatic space defined by the sophisticated geometry of the curved shell roof and the lightweight sculptural panels suspended below where the geometric pattern of the assembly creates ever-changing spatial and light effects, celebrating the events of both arrival and departure.

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image

Architects: Asymptote Architecture and Artech Architects
Location: Kaohsiung , Taiwan
Project Team: Asymptote Architecture – Hani Rashid & Lise Anne Couture, Artech Architects – Kris Yao
Structural Engineering: Knippers Helbig
Environmental Engineering: Transsolar

Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Asymptote Architecture

Click for larger image


Cruise Consultant: Parsons Brinckerhoff
Fire, Electrical & Plumbing: Heng Kai
Traffic Engineering: Everest
Project Area: 40,000 sqm
Client: Kaohsiung Harbor Bureau
Competition: Kaohsiung Port Terminal 2010
Photographs and Drawings: Courtesy of Asymptote Architecture


See also:

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Kaohsiung Port Terminal by Reiser + UmemotoThe Yas Hotel by
Asymptote
Strata Tower by
Asymptote