Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Countertop, Sink, Kitchen, Windows, Glass, HandrailPangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Stairs, Handrail, WindowsPangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - HandrailPangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Brick, Door, ColumnPangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - More Images+ 28

Seongnam-si, South Korea
  • Architects: JYA-RCHITECTS
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  283
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Hwang Hyochel
Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Windows, Facade
© Hwang Hyochel

Text description provided by the architects. Two friends wanted a house of their own. They bought a land and designed a house together. However, they had different family composition, different lifestyles as well as different ideas on the house.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Brick, Windows, Facade, Stairs, Handrail, Courtyard
© Hwang Hyochel

One had his focus on a family of two daughters while the other, staying single, focused on his private spaces. One wanted the space to be bright and open while the other wished it to be subtle and private. One hoped the house to have a variety of spaces amusingly entangled together for the children while the other wanted spaces to be simply arranged and as spacious as possible.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Stairs, Handrail
© Hwang Hyochel

Yet, they had a common problem to overcome—a size of a new house could not be larger than the houses they lived at the time. The problem was unavoidable as two different families had to share a land and a house above it. Thus, the families had to first think about and decide on an actual size of all their necessary spaces by looking at floor plans. The process made them think about something fundamental—something that they had never needed to think about when living in ‘ready-made’ houses. It also required them to adapt to the size of spaces in their new house and to shift their mind from living and thinking horizontally to vertically and three dimensionally.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Image 21 of 33
First Floor Plan
Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Image 31 of 33
Section
Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Image 22 of 33
Second Floor Plan

As such, the shape of a new house was determined in a way to secure as large area as possible within the limit allowed by local regulations. First, a courtyard that would function as a parking lot was built at the center in order to keep to the building-to-land ratio. Second, a roof that slopes upward from the south to the north following the local daylight regulation created a space for a cozy attic.
As a result, the house naturally exposed its bare red skin that was uncovered by the courtyard among hard layers of greish bricks with a somewhat cold but casual feeling.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Stairs, Lighting, Countertop, Handrail
© Hwang Hyochel

Furthermore, unlike the exterior of the same feeling, the interior of two houses placed on the right and left side of the courtyard was designed to have a different feeling and structure from a basement to an attic in order to meet their respective tastes and characteristics mentioned earlier.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Windows, Brick, Facade
© Hwang Hyochel

Building a house is a very difficult process. Above many reasons, the most apparent one would be the fact that there are too many things to decided on. Therefore, building a house for two families or two houses that look like one would definitely create enormous difficulties. Without doubt, the two friends and their families had to face many difficulties and dealt with them after endless conversations and sleepless nights which would surely go on for years ahead in their new houses.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Windows, Facade
© Hwang Hyochel

We hereby deeply thank the two families who have wisely overcome all the obstacles and send our wishes and cheers for their happier lives ahead.

Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS - Windows, Facade
© Hwang Hyochel

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Cite: "Pangyo House / JYA-RCHITECTS" 03 Feb 2016. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/781435/pangyo-house-jya-rchitects> ISSN 0719-8884

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