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Galleria Hall West, Seoul, South Korean building, Project, Photos, Store, Design
Galleria Hall West Seoul, South Korea
Korean building by UN Studio
Galleria Hall West, Seoul, South Korea 2003-04
Project description
- Design of exterior Façade
- Refurbishment of Interior
- Design of Interior Furniture and Landscape
- Design of related exterior spaces
Galleria Hall West, Seoul, South Korea - Description
Galleria Hall West, Seoul, South Korea, UN Studio
Magnetic Geometries
Within Seoul, the Galleria Department Store exists within a typical
system of highly specialized department stores, each representing
a microcosm with its own eco-climate to which its customers are finely
attuned. Situated at the top end of this system, the Galleria Fashion
Hall together with the Galleria Masterpiece Hall in close vicinity
carry a large number of highly prestigious brands and consequently
attract visitors from a wide area, including Japan. The Galleria Fashion
Hall is prominently situated in the Apgujeong-dong district, on of
the trendiest commercial districts in Seoul.
However, from the outside the store appears unremarkable. In October
2003 the Galleria hired UN Studio to design a new façade and
interior to mark the stores transformation (in their own marketing-originated
words) from novel to noble, becoming more luxurious
while remaining trendy and unique.
UN Studios exterior renewal, completed in September 2004, exists
of the application of 4330 glass disks on the metal substructure that
is directly attached to the existing façade. These discs are
treated with a special iridescent foil, which causes constant changes
in the perception of the façade. At night, a special lighting
scheme, designed cooperatively by UN Studio and ArupLighting, illuminates
the discs by reflecting the dynamics of the weather conditions that
happened during the day.
The interior renovation is focused on the general store areas in between
the individual branded shops. UN Studio has sought to streamline the
circulation spaces, providing catwalks of light-colored,
glossy co-coordinated walkways and ceilings, which improve orientation
and give the store a super-bright, fresh image.

Galleria Hall West, Seoul, South Korea, UN Studio
Interior concept:
For the updating of the existing interiors, our inspiration is the
fashion catwalk; the customer should find himself in the focus of
the fashion world, feeling himself/herself as the attractive model
in midst the glamorous Fashion Hall.
The interior design focuses on the elimination of superfluous and
outdated details and the introduction of two new Big Details: the
escalator which becomes a moving event space, and the ceiling lighting
which becomes a device that provides a fluent directionality and dynamics
to the shop floors.
Lighting and concept for interior catwalks:
For the main circulation corridors (catwalks) the lighting is integrated
within the dropped ceiling. The illumination of the corridor is designed
as a continuous lighting element, which consist of linear rail following
the direction of the corridors and bending whenever there is a change
in direction. Below these rails a white plastic foil is stretched
and on every second rail TL-lights are mounted. The semi-opaque white
foil spreads the light equally creating a continuous field above the
main corridors. The combination of up-lights and rails casts multiple
shadows on the white foil that create depth in the ceiling and where
directions change, these shadows emphasize way-finding. The rails
are straight along the corridors length and turn the corners,
always keeping the same radii. Where two corridors connect in a T-crossing
or X-crossing, the rails bend to accommodate directions.
Lights used above Corridor ceiling:
Straight corridors: PHILIPS-TMS 206-128 (840), PHILIPS-TMS 206-114
(840)
Round corners: COLD CATHODE LIGHTING LAMP COLOR MATCH TO TMS
206 (840) Plastic foil material: Barrisol, Venus blanc
Color scheme:
Color was also added to the primary rails in the ceiling package,
the effect is a subtle tint of color created by the combination of
lights and the plastic foil. The color tint is also reflected in the
highly polished artificial stone used to pave the corridors. The gradient
of color and the intensity was carefully chosen as not to influence
the lighting of the products in the stores.
Lighting and interior concept for enclosure of vertical circulation
space:
The walls enclosing the escalator space are designed as a series of
vertical IPE-beams that are clad from both sides with glass. Towards
the inside of the escalators the glass is finished with a partially
transparent, reflective foil so that customers on the escalators perceive
the space and the relation to the other floors more intensely. The
glass on the opposite side of the construction facing the stores is
translucent which allows for view corridors overseeing the main vertical
circulation space behind the benches the public meeting zones
designed for Galleria. In the vertical walls large display pockets
are integrated that can be used to transmit information projected
simultaneously to the exterior façade and can be used for branding
and advertisements. The vertical enclosure and the display pockets
continue into the ceiling of the space.
The lighting of the escalator walls is done with Cold Cathode lighting,
which is located in between the two layers of glass in vertical arrangement.
These light strips cast white light and illuminate the space by soft
animation in vertical direction. The underside of the escalators is
illuminated by strips of Cold Cathode lighting covered with color
filters casting the same colors as used for the identification in
the ceilings on the different floors on the angled surfaces underneath
the escalators. The colored light is used to enhance the directions
of way-finding and guide the customer from one floor to the other.
Exterior Façade Concept:
The effect we were trying to achieve with the facade is to generate
a lively surface that fascinates, attracts and always looks different,
depending upon the point of view of the spectator and depending upon
the time of day and time of year.
The visual theme we have chosen for the façade design is that
of a geometrical pattern based upon the circle which is repeated and
generates a surface. In total 4330 glass discs are hung from a metal
sub-structure that is directly mounted on the existing concrete cladding
of the department store. The glass discs are made of sandblasted laminated
glass, including a special dicroic foil. Testing different materials
and combinations of foil and glass finishes was essential during the
process and several on site mock-ups were made in order to test and
forecast the effects generated during day and night.
Day:
During the day the atmospheric and weather changes influence the degree
of reflection and absorption of light and color on the glass circles,
so that from different viewing points the appearance of each disc
and the total surface changes constantly according to those external
conditions that are beyond human control.
Night:
During the night situation of the building the lighting design developed
for the façade additionally starts to interact with the material
condition of the glass discs. By placing behind each of the glass
discs an LED-light source and by controlling the lights digitally
one by one, the possibilities to manipulate color and light emission
become endless. Recording day-to-day weather conditions and processing
the data with the computer before projecting them in transformed version
onto the glass skin is just one out of many possibilities of the technology
used. Our façade solution also has the potential to be adapted
for special occasions and can be changed over time according to seasons,
fashion events and artistic inspirations. Nevertheless, the character
of the glass disc skin is different from the principle technologies
used in screens, since whatever visual information is projected onto
the discs; it will be transformed due to the material conditions of
the glass disc and foils. The new façade is not a projection
screen in the conventional sense, but it interacts with the projected
information and generates a circular pixilated visual face by night.
Quotes Ben van Berkel:
As an architect I am interested in dressing the future. Like
a fashion designer, but on a much larger scale, I am helping the world
figure out how it will look tomorrow.
This is a building for living design, not dead art. What you
find in The Galleria is stuff that lives for today. Beautiful, gorgeous
clothes carefully selected from the best designers in the world.
It is a wonderful, living collection that changes with every season,
changes in composition every day. And our design reflects that; the
facade causes a continually shifting, shimmering, alluring perception
the system of the colored glass disks and the super-bright
catwalk interiors represent a concept of magnetic geometry.
Galleria Hall West, Seoul, South Korea - Building Information
Client: HANWHA STORES CO., LTD
Design Architect: [Schematic Design and Design Development phase]
UN Studio: Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos with Astrid Piber, Ger
Gijzen, Cristina Bolis, Markus Hudert, Colette Parras, Arjan van der
Bliek, Christian Veddeler, Albert Gnodde, Richard Crofts, Barry Munster,
Mafalda Bothelo, Elke Uitz, Harm Wassink
Design Advisors:
Structural engineers: Arup & Partners, Arjan Habraken (Schematic
Design)
Lighting Design: Arup Lighting, Rogier van der Heide IALD , Simone
Collon
Wayfinding Design: Bureau Mijksenaar, Martijn Geerdes (Design Development)
Executive Architects:
Executive architects Façade Design: RAC Rah Architecture
Consulting
Executive architects Interior Design: Kesson International
Executive Lighting Design: Eon/SLD
Contractors:
Façade construction: Dongshin C G E Co. Ltd, Dongshin Glass
Co. Ltd.
Façade Lighting: Xilver B.V.
Interior construction: Hanwha Engineering & Construction Corp.
Façade construction: Hanwha Engineering & Construction
Corp.
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Galleria Hall West Seoul architect : UNStudio
Korean Architecture - Selection
of UNStudio projects:
I'Park City Suwon, Korea

I'Park City Suwon
Busan World Business Centre
UNStudio Architects

image : World Business Centre Busan, 2011, UNStudio 2007
World Business Centre Busan
I'Park City Model House, Korea

photo : Christian Richters
I'Park City Model House

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Galleria Hall West Seoul page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Galleria Hall West Seoul : page - adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
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