Lantern Café

Lantern Café
© Park Sehee

LANTERN CAFÉ

Studio Studio

ARCHITECTS
Studio Studio

DESIGN, CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT, SUPERVISING & FURNITURE DESIGN
Do Gwanghun

PHOTOGRAPHS
Park Sehee

AREA
70 M²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Incheon, South Korea

CATEGORY
Coffee Shop, Adaptive Reuse

Text description provided by architect.

This project is to turn an old house into a café. The relationship between the new building and the old roof was important. It was not a matter of preservation, but rather a matter of the simple fact that ‘different times meet.’

Lantern Café
© Park Sehee
Lantern Café
© Park Sehee

There are so many examples of renovating old houses. In addition to home renovations in Japan, many houses in Seoul are now being transformed into commercial spaces. What was important to me was the complete separation of the 1980s and 2020s by the roof and walls.

The roof has already been completed, so I thought that newly created things should be extremely current. The ray of time does not come down under the roof. I didn't want the project to take over the roof history with words like retro or new retro or reprint.

Lantern Café
© Park Sehee
Lantern Café
© Park Sehee

There are tastes in the purpose of the form, but the problem of characteristics is bigger in that the project must be in the current field of Seoul. As mentioned, there are numerous home renovation projects in Seoul, and most are focused on reproduction or retro.

Or they completely ignore the microhistory of the building from today's point of view. I am not criticizing these two attitudes as wrong. But at least I am simply acknowledging the existence of the building's history.

nLDK - Here, users drink coffee, read a book occasionally, tap their laptop like I do now, and chat with their friends. And users must share that space with others.

Lantern Café
© Park Sehee
Lantern Café
© Park Sehee
Lantern Café
© Park Sehee

From that point of view, the wall structure nLDK plan is difficult. A small room where one person can barely sleep, a living room where the family gathers to watch TV, and a couple's bedroom must be transformed into a space that must be shared with strangers.

When I see this new act being performed on the scale of an existing house, uncomfortable feelings come to mind in my body. Maybe it's because I feel like I'm lying in someone else's house?

However, it was not possible to remove all the walls. Minimal structural reinforcement had to be made and most of the walls had to be maintained. 

Lantern Café
© Park Sehee
Lantern Café
© Park Sehee
Lantern Café
© Park Sehee

After that, I made an extension wall of about 300mm on the center wall. This is to avoid looking like a familiar plan. I'm not sure how effective this intervention was. Nevertheless, I feel that this space has become less 'homey'. 

On some days, design may not be able to fully overcome or completely solve it. However, it is satisfactory to some extent that certain problems have been resolved a little.

Aggressive intervention would have narrowed the 70 square meter space. I had to decide between ‘removing the atmosphere of the house and ‘spacious’, and I chose the second.

Lantern Café
© Park Sehee


Lantern Café
Proposed Floor Plan
Lantern Café
Existing Floor Plan