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Tagged: north korea

A closer look: “Crossing Parallels”, winner of the Korean DMZ Underground Bath House competition

By Justine Testado|

Wednesday, Apr 12, 2017

“Crossing Parallels” by STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM (Jinhyun Jun, Minkyung Song, and Kangil Ji).

From arch out loud's Korean DMZ Underground Bath House ideas competition, we're taking a closer look at the winning entry, “Crossing Parallels” by STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM (Jinhyun Jun, Minkyung Song, and Kangil Ji). The global competition challenged designers to explore the idea of building a public underground bath house that responds to the geopolitical conditions of the highly tensioned 38th Parallel, a.k.a. the Demilitarized Zone between North Korea and South Korea. 

The New York-based STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM team crafted a poetic narrative in “Crossing Parallels”, a double helix-shaped structure that presents the bath house as a metaphorical theater.

The designers shared more details about their entry with Bustler. Scroll down for a look.

View of North Korean. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

Project description: “38th Parallel, Checkpoint/Changing Room, and Entrance to Double Helix Ramp (Scene 1-3): Visitors from each side approach the theater by walking along the 38th parallel: approach towards a same point on the line, become closer, but turn to opposite directions, and enter the theater (scene 1).”

View of South Korean. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.
Observing from afar. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“After passing by the checkpoint and the changing room (scene 2), they confront again, but with distance (scene 3).”

Approaching closer. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“Double Helix Ramp as Stage and Audience (Scenes 4-7): While walking down the double helix ramp, visitors experience series of emotional/physical merging and diverging, moments of crossing uncrossable lines (projected 38th parallel line on the ramp), while being more away from each other.”

Confrontation. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“Here, visitors become actors and audience at the same time; each observe each other’s feelings, while passing through layers of tension and relaxation: a process of accumulating ambivalent communal emotions.”

Communal Pool. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“Communal Pool (Scene 8) Upon reaching communal pool, all emotions experienced before are liquefied into water; debris of emotions brought by actors / audiences compose pools of emotions. Now, a performance without playwright is played by visitors’ spontaneous conversations, and by wave in the emotional pool.”

Find project diagrams in the image gallery below. In case you missed them, you can find the runners-up entries here.

Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

RELATED NEWS The winning ideas for an underground bath house at the Korean DMZ
RELATED COMPETITION Borders - The Korean Demilitarized Zone Underground Bath House

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bathhouse ● korea ● north korea ● south korea ● dmz ● arch out loud ● ideas competition ● competition ● underground ● tourism

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A closer look: “Crossing Parallels”, winner of the Korean DMZ Underground Bath House competition

The winning ideas for an underground bath house at the Korean DMZ

Details into the Korean Peninsula's "Crow's Eye View" pavilion for the 2014 Venice Biennale

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A closer look: “Crossing Parallels”, winner of the Korean DMZ Underground Bath House competition

By Justine Testado|

Wednesday, Apr 12, 2017

Share

“Crossing Parallels” by STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM (Jinhyun Jun, Minkyung Song, and Kangil Ji).

Related

bathhouse ● korea ● north korea ● south korea ● dmz ● arch out loud ● ideas competition ● competition ● underground ● tourism

From arch out loud's Korean DMZ Underground Bath House ideas competition, we're taking a closer look at the winning entry, “Crossing Parallels” by STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM (Jinhyun Jun, Minkyung Song, and Kangil Ji). The global competition challenged designers to explore the idea of building a public underground bath house that responds to the geopolitical conditions of the highly tensioned 38th Parallel, a.k.a. the Demilitarized Zone between North Korea and South Korea. 

The New York-based STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM team crafted a poetic narrative in “Crossing Parallels”, a double helix-shaped structure that presents the bath house as a metaphorical theater.

The designers shared more details about their entry with Bustler. Scroll down for a look.

View of North Korean. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

Project description: “38th Parallel, Checkpoint/Changing Room, and Entrance to Double Helix Ramp (Scene 1-3): Visitors from each side approach the theater by walking along the 38th parallel: approach towards a same point on the line, become closer, but turn to opposite directions, and enter the theater (scene 1).”

View of South Korean. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.
Observing from afar. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“After passing by the checkpoint and the changing room (scene 2), they confront again, but with distance (scene 3).”

Approaching closer. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“Double Helix Ramp as Stage and Audience (Scenes 4-7): While walking down the double helix ramp, visitors experience series of emotional/physical merging and diverging, moments of crossing uncrossable lines (projected 38th parallel line on the ramp), while being more away from each other.”

Confrontation. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“Here, visitors become actors and audience at the same time; each observe each other’s feelings, while passing through layers of tension and relaxation: a process of accumulating ambivalent communal emotions.”

Communal Pool. Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

“Communal Pool (Scene 8) Upon reaching communal pool, all emotions experienced before are liquefied into water; debris of emotions brought by actors / audiences compose pools of emotions. Now, a performance without playwright is played by visitors’ spontaneous conversations, and by wave in the emotional pool.”

Find project diagrams in the image gallery below. In case you missed them, you can find the runners-up entries here.

Image credit: STUDIO M.R.D.O. & Studio LaM.

RELATED NEWS The winning ideas for an underground bath house at the Korean DMZ
RELATED COMPETITION Borders - The Korean Demilitarized Zone Underground Bath House

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