Project R6 by REX






Skyscrapers in Seoul: New York firm REX was another of the seventeen architects commissioned to design skyscrapers for the fast-growing Yongsan International Business District of Seoul, South Korea. They’ve proposed a tower that looks like like a filing cabinet with its drawers open.



Top and above: images are by Luxigon

A hollow centre and large courtyard garden will be revealed at the heart of the 144-metre-high building, which is titled Project R6.



Above: image is by Luxigon

A series of compact apartments will overlook this courtyard from within the tower’s upper storeys, while shops will surround it on the lower levels.



Above: image is by Luxigon

The apartments are designed to accomodate short-term occupants, so few will have a footprint greater than 40 square metres and each will incorporate space-saving measures such as moving walls and fold-away bedrooms.



The project is due to complete in 2016.



The Yongsan International Business District was masterplanned by Daniel Libeskind and is the biggest urban development project in South Korea. Due for completion in 2024, the masterplan was commissioned by South Korean developer DreamHub.



Other projects featured so far from the district include a building shaped like a hash symbol and two towers that resemble the exploding World Trade Centre on 9/11. See all the stories here.



Images are by REX apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s some more information from REX:

Yongsan International Business District “Project R6”
Seoul, Korea

YIBD “Project R6” is an urban boutique residence for short-term business people, young urban professionals, and foreign residents.



Above: image is by Luxigon

Due to the transience of its target users and the short durations during which they are home, R6’s unit sizes are small, including 40 m2, 50 m2, and 60 m2 residences, with the majority being 40 m2.



Above: image is by Luxigon

To meet the trends of its users and compensate for its small unit size, R6 must engender a strong sense of community and its residences must be highly attractive, providing generous views, daylight, and cross-ventilation.



Maximizing daylight and cross-ventilation are also paramount to providing a highly sustainable residence.



In a standard housing tower, 40 m2 to 60 m2 units would create poorly dimensioned and oppressive residences, offering constrained views, little daylight, and poor ventilation, and community would be limited to activities at the tower’s base.



By pulling layers of the typical housing tower in opposing directions, the small units maintain their size, but are stretched into favorable proportions that provide views and daylight from both sides, excellent cross-ventilation, and a strong sense of community through the creation of a central courtyard, roof terraces, and conversation/reading/play pods.



The stretched layers are strategically positioned to guarantee unobstructed daylight into all units, and to create adequate continuity of the building’s primary structure: a concrete-encased steel mega-brace that encircles the courtyard.



The mega-brace supports a shelf-like matrix of walls and floor slabs that define each unit. Into each shelf is inserted a wooden shell containing a bathroom on one side and a kitchen on the other.



A movable wall—using standard compact shelving technology—shifts within the unit to define a bedroom (adjacent to the bathroom) or a living room (adjacent to the kitchen). The wall includes a bed, nightstands, couch, television mount, task lights, and storage.



A high-performance façade—composed of frameless IGUs—emphasizes the remarkable exterior views while interior black-out and shade roller blinds control sunlight and glare.



The floor to ceiling interior façade—also composed of frameless IGUs and equipped with black-out and shade roller blinds—provides spatial relief and a sense of community while maintaining privacy.



The resulting architecture provides views and daylight from both sides, and excellent cross-ventilation.



Community and spatial relief are further generated by conversation/reading/play pods extending into the courtyard.



The pods playfully assume the varying widths of the walls behind such that no views are blocked and privacy in the units is maintained.



Block R6 is a narrow parcel bounded by the planned Mountain Park—including Children’s Interactive Spray Park, Rail Road Museum, Outdoor Amphitheater, and Yongsan Station Esplanade—and the central park of the planned development Zone B3, adjacent to Hangang-ro. By placing the building to the south of Block R6, all units command great views and the building forms a gateway to YIBD from Hangang-ro.



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Client: Dreamhub Project Financing Vehicle Co., Ltd.



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Program: 47,800 m2 (514,500 sf) of luxury housing for short-term residents, 27,000 m2 (290,600 sf) of retail, and 929 parking stalls



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Area: 115,500 m2 (1,240,000 sf)



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Construction budget: Confidential



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Status: Commenced 2011; completed Schematic Design 2012; completion expected 2016



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Design architect: REX



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Key personnel: Tiago Barros, Adam Chizmar, Danny Duong, Luis Gil, Gabriel Jewell-Vitale, SeokHun Kim, Armen Menendian, Romea Muryń, Roberto Otero, Se Yoon Park, Joshua Prince-Ramus, Lena Reeh Rasmussen, Yuan Tiauriman



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Executive architect: Mooyoung



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Consultants: Barker Mohandas, Buro Happold, Front, Level Acoustics, Magnusson Klemencic, Scape, Shen Milsom Wilke, Tillotson Design

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