Mandala
The Suncheon Art Platform project refers to the Mandala idea of expanding the squared plan from a dense inner nucleus. This nucleus is a stack of dislocated volumes which surround an axial inner void. The outer part of the nucleus is a continuous open space which develops from the ground to the top floor through a sequence of 360 degrees terraces.
Mandala is an architectural complex. It focuses on the need of a balance between the historical value of the Old City and the most innovative issues and topics related to the eco-identity of the rich natural environment of the surrounding. Our main strategy is to learn from the context and rely on the existing potentialities within Suncheon and South Korean culture. The first move proposes an architectural complex able to transform the plot site in a new place that deserves to be seen and experienced in order to learn about the “Humanities City” that the brief addressed, a new engine within the ongoing urban regeneration of Suncheon Old City. Not a generic box that includes contents within its envelope but a number of devices and buildings able to represent several aspects of the South Korean historical heritage of Suncheon, designed in a contemporary innovative way.
The Mandala’s purpose is to make visitors learn from the direct experience in order to share knowledge about the history and the contemporary.
Within the complex there are: in the Site A a Square Wall that protect an Inner Garden in whose centre there is the visitor and the art centre’ building; outside the wall a Rear Garden, made by a red pine forest, and a set of pavilions: the Hang-Rae Memorial and the Palmabi and, in the Site B, the Cafè Pavilion and the Yeonja-Ru facing the river. An open flexible landscape has the aim of connecting the whole, while the parking instead is located in a lower level.
Starting from the East the plot is next to the Joonang-Ro street, which section is relevant both in vertical, because of the presence of an underground shopping centre below, and horizontal being highly polluted connecting the Central Joogang-Market block and the Fashion street with our plot. Our approach is to connect the several levels with a vertical connection device, the “East descent”, highly combined with the complex and visible also from the exterior of the complex, able to led people from the inner garden of our complex both to the parking, located in the basement, and to the shopping centre.
Going South the plot take a respectful distance from the Ok-cheon stream and from the Former Suncheon Walls that might be found below the Site C, this will allow in the future to research on it without modifying the complex, keeping the needed car passage and integrating the new elements in the current settlements.
Close to the river is located the new Yeonja-Ru, born as a device of contemplation and meditation, detached from the ground level but easily reachable with the both stairs and lift. From its level the Suncheon landscape is visible and people could isolate themselves contemplating the surrounding nature.
Always in the south part of the plot the Café Pavilion is located as a completion of the close-by block of the existing Art-Café Street, in the frame of the urban regeneration of the city this in fact has to be intended crucial to experience the river and approach the Old City.
Going West the complex become more permeable to the context, the Rear Garden with the small architecture located within (the Hang- Rae Memorial and the Palmabi) offer the occasion to welcome visitors arriving from this direction with a Red-Pine Forest that as to be read as a mass to counterpart the open inner garden within the wall.
Towards North the existing path connecting the Joogang Market with the Culture street in the frame of the urban regeneration of Suncheon is kept and here is located the ramp to access the basement: this presence allow to take a distance from the existing private buildings.