My Gumi
Kyungsub Shin

My Gumi

poly.m.ur as Architects

Gumi, 2nd largest city in Gyeongsangbuk-do on southeastern part of Korea, is a town I called home for all of my 26 years of life until I moved to Seoul to work at an architecture firm. It was 5 years later when I decided to take a break and return home, exhausted and depleted physically as well as mentally in desperate search of breathing room. At the same time, it also happened to be when my parents wanted to move along with their plan to build a house for their retirement and I wanted to help them any way I could. When I decided to head home, I was determined to pull out all the resources I had at my disposal gained from working as an architect and carry the project through from design to supervision.

photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin

Property sits halfway on a gently-sloped mountain in Gumi where city zoning is designated as Natural Green Zone, and my parentspurchased the property as soon as the city approved residential development plan. As they envision their home looking around the property that was undeveloped and had no neighboring homes, however, they were forgetting to take into account one important factor: privacy. Their idea of a dream home was a quintessential ‘country home’ where they could literally step out of the door to access the nature as their backyard.

photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin

While they wanted a big window through which they could take in a full view of their wide-open yard, they didn’t really understand the harsh reality of encroaching neighbors and being resorted to having to keep those big windows covered for privacy. As an architect, it was important for me to propose a practical design of a house that allowed my parents to enjoy the yard in the front and mountain in the back without having to sacrifice their privacy. After some contemplation, I came up with a design to extend the exterior wall flanked by patches of courtyards as a way to ensure privacy. Walls and façade were integrated to become the exterior, and rooms were placed in a cruciform with the kitchen and dining in the middle. 4 courtyards were placed at each corner to create a shape of 田.

photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin

Simply put, there are 2 kinds of yards for My Gumi; one is the wide-open yard at the front of the house and the others are small yards located between the exterior wall and each room. Small yards placed at each corner of the square floor plan serve not only as an effective barrier against prying eyes but also as a buffer between the windows of each room and the main yard to make the house more comfy and cozy. For the overall structure, what my parents originally had in mind was a 2-story house to create more space for their adult children to visit and stay.

photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin

My idea was quite different. Considering the budget and scale of the project, I proposed a single-story home with space more suited for just my parents. Since the site is zoned as Natural Green Zone subjected to building coverage ratio requirement of 20%, lot size of 150-pyong meant that total floor space should be limited to 30-pyong and multi-story building would mean smaller floor space for each floor. Keeping in mind a single-story house better suited for occupancy by 2 people, I placed the secondary bedroom and utility room to the north so more space was allowed for my parents.

photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin

I designated the spaces for my parent’s dream of a room with floor-heating furnace and guest room in the sub-ground floor created by the slope of property being located slightly elevated from adjacent road, but I managed to convince my parent to finish them later when they had financial room in order to make the limited budget work. As a whole, the house features spacious living and kitchen and dining space with great floor-to-ceiling height where my parents will spend the most amount of time. Ceilings over the living room, kitchen and dining room are exposed and converge in the middle of the house at different angles, and juxtaposition of the exposed ceilings brought an added benefit of making the space look much more spacious.

photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin
photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin
photo_credit Kyungsub Shin
Kyungsub Shin
Caption
Caption

Material Used :
1. Facade cladding: Basalt plate stone
2. Flooring: Polishing tile, Brand: YOUNHYUN TRADING
3. Doors: ABS door
4. Windows: AL system window, WDS90 / ESS, Brand: EAGON 
5. Roofing: Basalt plate stone
6. Interior lighting: Brand: FUSE

Read story in ItalianoPortuguêsEspañolFrançais and Deutsch

Project Credits
Architects
Photographers
Engineers
Product Spec Sheet

ElementBrand
DoorsABS Group
AL system windowEagon
Interior lightingFUSE Lighting
Polishing tileyounhyun trading
Product Spec Sheet
Doors
AL system window
by Eagon
Interior lighting
Polishing tile
Products Behind Projects
Product Spotlight
News
25 best metal cladding manufacturers
29 Apr 2024 Specification
25 best metal cladding manufacturers

Metal cladding can combine functionality with aesthetics while meeting high sustainability targets,... More

Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos’ restoration of Munich museum finds freedom within limitations
29 Apr 2024 News
Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos’ restoration of Munich museum finds freedom within limitations

Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos has completed the restoration and expansion of the Archaeologische Staats... More

Introducing Partner Lemi Group
29 Apr 2024 Partner News
Introducing Partner Lemi Group

Lemi Group is an international leader in the design and manufacture of treatment tables, chairs, and... More

Archello Awards 2024 – Early Bird submissions ending April 30th
26 Apr 2024 News
Archello Awards 2024 – Early Bird submissions ending April 30th

The Archello Awards is an exhilarating and affordable global awards program celebrating the best arc... More

Introducing the Archello Podcast: the most visual architecture podcast in the world
26 Apr 2024 News
Introducing the Archello Podcast: the most visual architecture podcast in the world

Archello is thrilled to announce the launch of the Archello Podcast, a series of conversations featu... More

Tilburg University inaugurates the Marga Klompé building constructed from wood
26 Apr 2024 News
Tilburg University inaugurates the Marga Klompé building constructed from wood

The Marga Klompé building, designed by Powerhouse Company for Tilburg University in the Nethe... More

FAAB proposes “green up” solution for Łukasiewicz Research Network Headquarters in Warsaw
25 Apr 2024 News
FAAB proposes “green up” solution for Łukasiewicz Research Network Headquarters in Warsaw

Warsaw-based FAAB has developed a “green-up” solution for the construction of Łukasiewic... More

Mole Architects and Invisible Studio complete sustainable, utilitarian building for Forest School Camps
24 Apr 2024 News
Mole Architects and Invisible Studio complete sustainable, utilitarian building for Forest School Camps

Mole Architects and Invisible Studio have completed “The Big Roof”, a new low-carbon and... More