Open side-bar Menu
 ArchShowcase
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Café Loge in Seoul, South Korea by THE CORNERZ + KODE Architects

 
November 19th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: THE CORNERZ

EROM, a company investigating health solutions with uncooked food and various products based on raw materials from nature conducts experiments and makes suggestions from various angles so that modern people exposed to various stresses can become healthy. Café Loge is a café brand newly launched as a part of such suggestions. The core of the project is selling self-developed differentiated natural contents and various food and beverage and promoting a nature-friendly corporate image.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

  • Architects: THE CORNERZ + KODE Architects
  • Project: Café Loge
  • Location: Sampyeong-dong 656 Bundang-gu Seongnam-si, Gyeonggi-do, Seoul
  • Photography: Shin gyung-sub
  • Client: EROM
  • Collaborator: DESIGN SAMUSIL (Kim young-tae, Lee min-ho)
  • Lead Architect: THE CORNERZ (Hong jong-hwa, Lee ji-hong), KODE ARCHITECTS (Kim min-ho)
  • Area: 100㎡
  • Project Year: 2018

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Café Loge is located on the first floor of a typical office building in a commercial area in East Pangyo, Republic of Korea. The upper part is enveloped with a curtain wall, and the lower part is covered with a dark stone finish, transparent glass, and an exaggerated sign, so it represents a newtown but dry commercial street. Café Loge needed to get out of this existing commercial street, boldly. A boundary of unconventional space was made in the dull city center, using arches that could have firm formal vocabularies based on white mosaic tiles with a solid, strong property instead of transparent material called glass, and through the glass arch, bluish green colored interior space and nature in the raw could be seen from the street.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

The indoor space was designed to be able to provide a feeling as if one was in a little forest. Plant boxes in various shapes were installed here and there in the café, and a variety of flora were planted to enhance the image of a forest. The wall surface was finished, centering around the doors and the part of the beginning of the curved surface of the window arch while the lower part was finished with white color to bring the flora into relief, and the upper part was finished in dark green color to enrich the space. The ceiling was designed in an inverted arch form that would further build up the atmosphere of the forest, visually interrupting the equipment pipes like ducts on the exposed ceiling, while the floor emphasized the feel of the forest, using eco-friendly timber.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

A long rectangular plant box was installed at the place you would first notice, entering the café, and a small garden was created by planting a variety of flora. The tables sticking out from big and small plants and soil would enable users to feel nature directly in the downtown area, and plant boxes and seats were made in a green curved form and placed on both sides around the plant boxes, so that visitors could feel as if they were enjoying a picnic, sitting on an outdoor forest.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

The table integrated with the exterior arches on one wall surface was planned as differentiated seats in which visitors can view the plants planted outside and the street together as privacy would be maintained because of the depth of the arches and behind that, general seats made by putting tables for two together were placed to compose the form of the seats so that they could accommodate various requirements of users.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

For the right wall of the café entrance, a display wall was planned, which could promote EROM’s uncooked food ingredient. On the 21 round, bored display spaces, raw materials of various uncooked foods would be displayed, and the exhibits would stand out further through the soft light from the white background and the back side. Plant boxes were installed at the bottom of the display wall, emphasizing the feel of raw materials made in nature and being in harmony with the forest image of the entire space.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

The station was planned to be harmonized with the café, designing it with organic linear and green color materials. For the sub-kitchen located on the back side, using a green curtain in the arch opening on the white wall, the design vocabulary used outside was drawn in a unified look. It was designed for psychological connection in spite of visual interruption.

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © Shin gyung-sub

Image Courtesy © THE CORNERZ + KODE Architects

Image Courtesy © THE CORNERZ + KODE Architects

Image Courtesy © THE CORNERZ + KODE Architects

Tags: ,

Categories: Cafe, Cafeteria, Interiors




© 2024 Internet Business Systems, Inc.
670 Aberdeen Way, Milpitas, CA 95035
+1 (408) 882-6554 — Contact Us, or visit our other sites:
TechJobsCafe - Technical Jobs and Resumes EDACafe - Electronic Design Automation GISCafe - Geographical Information Services  MCADCafe - Mechanical Design and Engineering ShareCG - Share Computer Graphic (CG) Animation, 3D Art and 3D Models
  Privacy PolicyAdvertise