Shinsegae International

Seoul, South Korea
Photo © Kevin Scott / Olson Kundig
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Photo © Kevin Scott / Olson Kundig
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Photo © Kevin Scott / Olson Kundig
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Photo © Kyungsub Shin
Architects
Olson Kundig
Location
Seoul, South Korea
Year
2015

In designing a new fifteen-story headquarters for international luxury clothier Shinsegae International, Olson Kundig sought to create an iconic landmark in the heart of Gangnam-gu, one of Seoul’s largest districts. Completed in 2015, the building unites more than five hundred Shinsegae employees, who were previously spread between several buildings throughout the city. The program includes staff offices and meeting spaces, design studios, a rooftop garden and sculpture park, and ground-level retail and restaurant space that face onto a public plaza. Secure zoned entry provides public building access from the street and controlled private access for corporate officers and VIP guests via a side entry.

The high-performance custom-designed façade is a direct response to the client’s desire for a corporate flagship that departs from the traditional look-and-feel of modern commercial buildings. Designed to meet Korea’s progressive energy codes, which are more rigorous than the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED® standards, the building’s skin incorporates a range of technologies that reduce heat gain while optimizing thermal comfort and maximizing natural daylight all year round.

“The façade is intended to move like fabric does – changing positions and proportions, which is especially important at the city level of visual engagement with the building.” –Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal

This sense of movement and materiality is particularly evident within the first four floors of the building where seven custom eight-foot-diameter steel wheels open and close 35 foot-tall external panels to modulate daylight. The dynamic ethos of the fashion world is captured in these kinetic components, which can move, morph and change throughout the course of the day; each time the panels are engaged, the building’s presence is altered anew.

A well facilitated design and engineering process—which included early prototyping and testing by the project team in the Pacific Northwest—combined with a close collaboration with the local architect, engineers and contractor in Seoul, contributed to this successful project whose urban site came with extremely tight contextual logistics.

Project Team: Tom Kundig, FAIA, RIBA, Design Principal; Dan Wilson, AIA, Principal; Jason Roseler, LEED® AP, Project Architect; Jerry Garcia, LEED® AP, Angus MacGregor, RIBA, LEED® AP, Nathan Boyd and Evan Harlan, Architectural Staff; Debbie Kennedy, LEED® AP ID+C, Interior Design Staff; Phil Turner, Gizmo Design

Key Consultants: Shinsegae Engineering and Construction, General Contractor; Magnusson Klemencic Associates, Structural Engineer; WSP, Mechanical Engineer; Allworth Design, Landscape Architect; Tino Kwan Lighting Consultants, Lighting Design; Front, Curtain Wall/Facade

Related Projects

  • Gebäudeadaptierungen Rathausbereich - Zwentendorf
    maul-architekten zt gmbh
  • FON - Housing and Kindergarten Fontanastrasse
    GERNER GERNER PLUS
  • GOLD - Housing Goldberg
    GERNER GERNER PLUS
  • BENE - Housing Benedikt
    GERNER GERNER PLUS
  • PUCH - Housing Puchsbaumgasse
    GERNER GERNER PLUS

Magazine

Other Projects by Olson Kundig

Collywood
West Hollywood, USA
Rolling Huts
Mazama, USA
Sequoia Point
Seattle, USA
Tillamook Creamery
Tillamook, USA
JW Marriott Los Cabos Beach Resort & Spa
Puerto Los Cabos, Mexico