Topograhy Architecture
Topograhy Architecture
Topograhy Architecture
To cite this article: Hayub Song & Eungee Cinn (2015) The Complementary Relationship between
Architecture and Topography: Focus on the Performative Relationship between the Houses of Kim
Incheurl and Topography, Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering, 14:2, 271-278,
DOI: 10.3130/jaabe.14.271
1
Associate Professor, Department of Architecture, Chung-Ang University, Korea
2
Assistant Professor, Division of Architecture and Urban Design, Incheon National University, Korea
Abstract
The aim of this study is to interpret the relationship between topography and architecture in the houses
designed by the Korean architect, Kim Incheurl from the 2000s. Kim's various types of single houses built
on a range of sites can be seen as representing a typology that addresses the complementary relationship
between architecture and topography. His interpretation of the site considered neither narrativity nor romantic
association, and rather focused on the physical realities of the site. His houses complemented what was
lacking on the sites by architectural framing that contains the practices of human life. The topography of
the site was reconfigured using architectural framing and was thus rehabilitated through the performance of
window-walls. However, Kim's houses are limited in their reaction to the site, in terms of the consideration
of site sustainability, plan type, material, and window-wall design. In order to suggest a productive criticism
that can provide insight into the performative relationship between Kim's houses and topography, this paper
suggests three topics: 1) creating sustainable outdoor settings on the site, 2) creating a deep structure of
interior space, and 3) developing performative window-walls through the variation of materials and opening
operation.
Keywords: topography; Kim Incheurl; inner space; single-row house; performative window-wall
Notes
1
Rykwert, Joseph (1991) On the Art of Building in Ten Books.
Cambridge: MIT Press.
2
Leatherbarrow, David. (2004) Topographical Stories: Studies in
Landscape and Architecture. Philadelphia: Penn Press.
3
Le Corbusier. (1993) The Poem of the Right Angle, New York
(Original Publication, Le Poeme de l'Angle Droit, 1955).
4
In the interpretation of Le Corbusier's poems, the emphasis on
horizontality is selected for the purpose of this paper. Although
Le Corbusier somewhat followed the concept of narrativity, since
English Romanticism proposed narrativity much earlier, in this
paper, Le Corbusier's poem A.3 will be emphasized as a historical
example that proposed horizontality.
5
Pope, Alexander. The Works of Alexander Pope, Esq: With Notes
and Illustrations by Himself and Others, Vol. 8. (Google eBook).
6
Secrest, Meryle (1998), Frank Lloyd Wright: A Biography.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 53.
7
Breuer, Marcel. (1955) "Architecture in the Landscape," Sun and
Shadow, the Philosophy of an Architect. Ed. Peter Blake. New
York: Dodd, Mead. 388.
8
Seung, Hyo Sang. (2011) The Most Beautiful Ruin. JoongAng Ilbo
(2011.04.30).
9
Kim, Incheurl. (2011) Space Opening. Seoul: DongNyuk.
10
The subjects of chapter 4.1 and 4.2 are theoretical, but chapter 4.3
shows exemplary cases.
11
In the 1990s, Korean architects such as 4.3 Group preferred
elevation design without decoration, as a foil to decorated
buildings. Kim Incheurl used concrete structures in tall buildings
and experimented with construction technology. However, in his
house design, the concrete structure is stylized and used as a style.
12
Olaf Fjeld, Per. (2009) Sverre Fehn: The Pattern of Thoughts. New
York: The Monacelli Press. 209.