Sosu Architects

Lee Lee Heon

Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh

LEE LEE HEON

Sosu Architects

ARCHITECTS
Sosu Architects

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING
Hangil Structural Engineering

FIRE ENGINEERING
Sungji Engineering

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
Sungji Engineering

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Sungji Engineering

MANUFACTURERS
American Standard, Kommerling, Monotile 01, Nova Design

CONSTRUCTION
3-square Construction Inc.

PHOTOGRAPHS
Kyung Roh

AREA
306 m²

YEAR
2020

LOCATION
Mapo-gu, South Korea

CATEGORY
Mixed Use Architecture, Apartments, Commercial Architecture

A HOUSE WITH OPEN CORNERS-

Lee Lee Heon stands on a side road not far from the main road, and it is a complex building of lower-level rental commercial space and upper-level residential space.

Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh

The building’s corners were actively opened so that passerby could easily recognize commercial rental spaces located on the backside road from the main road on the first and second floors.

The corners mostly open to the alleyway, which meets multi-family houses built in the same form around the 1990s, creates a staircase at the corners visually connected to the main road naturally links the movement line to the second floor’s commercial space.

THE EXTENSION OF AN ALLEYWAY

A low-rise small apartment house is an economical and flexible housing type containing characteristic individual lives in high-priced urban land. Lee Lee Heon was designed in a way that vertically connects three different types of detached houses.

Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh

The alleyway is connected to several sections of staircases that resemble how people enter the multi-family home in the existing alleyway.

This road enables selective encounters and secures the independence of the exterior space connected to each house.

Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh

GARDEN IN THE AIR

As detached houses in cities disappeared, the scenery greening the towns across the yard and fence also disappeared. Lee Lee Heon was designed to recreate the memories of the yard vertically.

The stairs that connect the building vertically were installed outwards so that light and wind could enter the whole building, and terraces were placed on planting all over the building.

Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh

The public space connected to the garden becomes street trees along the alleyway and a small yard for each household.


Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh


Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh
Lee Lee Heon
© Kyung Roh


Lee Lee Heon
Site Plan
Lee Lee Heon
First Floor Plan
Lee Lee Heon
Second Floor Plan
Lee Lee Heon
Third Floor Plan
Lee Lee Heon
Fourth Floor Plan
Lee Lee Heon
Fifth Floor Plan


Lee Lee Heon
Section 01

Sosu Architects
T +82 2 4612357 F +82 2 4622357
Sosu Architects
13, Seoulsup 6-gil, Seongdong-gu, Seoul, B1F, 668-5, Seongsu-dong 1-ga , Seoul, Korea, South