home
subscribe
free e-newsletter free e-newsletter
reader service
widget
advertise
Subscribe to Architectural Record today
and save 60% off the newsstand price.
comment

Seongnam City Hall

March 2008

KMD's Government Building Alights Like a Bird

By Henry Ng

Seongnam, a satellite city southeast of Seoul, South Korea, recently broke ground on a city hall that it hopes will symbolize the young community’s aspirations at a pivotal point in its growth. Chief among this building’s concerns is to sit lightly in its environment.

Seongnam’s new city hall
Seongnam’s new city hall
Images courtesy KMD Architects

Seongnam’s new city hall occupies a site in 250 acres of parkland at the center of town (top). KMD Architects attempted to convey lightness with its design by lofting the building on piers (above). Throughout the interior, garden atria will brighten and ventilate workspaces (right).

Rate this project:
Based on what you have seen and read about this project, how would you grade it? Use the stars below to indicate your assessment, five stars being the highest rating.
----- Advertising -----

“Government buildings are so often heavy handed, saying, ‘Here I am. Everyone get out of the way,’” observes Ryan Stevens, a principal of KMD Architects, which won an international competition to design the structure. “We thought of the analogy of a bird landing gingerly in the landscape.”

Ordinarily, it’s difficult for an 800,000-square-foot, 130-foot-high, nine-story building to express lightness. KMD achieved the quality in this faceted, gem-like structure by lofting the building’s bulk on piers above the landscape, allowing for a glazed curtain wall to enclose a ground floor. This strategy opens the municipal experience to visitors. Heightening the sense of transparency, expansive glazed walls on the north and south facade, and green garden atria throughout the interior, brighten and ventilate workspaces.

Two triangular sunscreens, fitted with photovoltaic panels, span the length of the south facade and reduce the building’s energy consumption. These sunscreens also allude to the image of a bird with its wings spread, a symbol that KMD worked with in the design process.

The building is located in a 250-acre park, formerly farmland, at the heart of the city. Older districts to the north are generally working-class; to the south, the Bundang district was founded in 1989 as a wealthy residential neighborhood. Seongnam hopes that its new city hall will help unite them, Stevens says.

Seongnam’s new city hall

 Reader Comments:

Sign in to Comment

To write a comment about this story, please sign in. If this is your first time commenting on this site, you will be required to fill out a brief registration form. Your public username will be the beginning of the email address that you enter into the form (everything before the @ symbol). Other than that, none of the information that you enter will be publically displayed.

We welcome comments from all points of view. Off-topic or abusive comments, however, will be removed at the editors’ discretion.

----- Advertising -----
McGrawHill
Search
Dispatches from RECORD's news editor, Jenna M. McKnight
View all blog posts
AR Selects: News Blogs
View all News Blogs
AIA Architecture Billing Index
Reader Feedback
Most Commented Most Recommended
Rankings reflect comments made in the past 14 days
Rankings reflect comments made in the past 14 days