JOYCE,
The
Lee
Gardens,
BOUTIQUE
–
Case-Real
–
HONG
KONG
JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real –
HONG KONG
Architect: Case-Real – Koichi Futatsumata
+ Partners
Period: May 2011-Oct 2011
Floor area: 353.9m2
Cooperation of construction:
SOGO DESIGN HONG KONG
Lighting Plan: USHIOSPAX
FUKUOKA
Construction: blueprint design
engineering Ltd
Art Works: Ryo Matsuoka
Photo: Daisuke Shimokawa (Nacasa
& Partners Inc.)
“Microcosm”: A shop design for Joyce, an
established Hong Kong boutique with a 40-year history. The site, a corner plot
located within The Lee Gardens, a luxury shopping mall in the central area
Causeway Bay, is V-ish in shape, with walls of windows on two sides and an area
measuring roughly 100 square meters. Even in Japan, it would be rare to get such
natural light in adjoining boutique, and we sought to create a bright, open
space in this location. To do so, it was imperative that the windows not be
obscured by the placement of the boutique’s commercial facilities, such as
fitting rooms, stock and staff rooms, and the like. We devised a method of
assembling those facilities and forming a core in the center of the space. At
the same time, Hong Kong gives one the impression of being is a place where all
sorts of things from all over the world are brought together, forming a complex
mix of urbanity. It is a space naturally crafted as aggregate of the natural
environment, man-made elements such as buildings and roads, and the thinking of
many different types of people. We felt an attraction to that which is as
diverse as Hong Kong’s unintentionally formed urban space. Thus, the
unintentional contour of the space was kept with a simple reduction in building
volume. Just as Hong Kong is as a city, the inevitable volume produced by the
location given here was a core, a ‘microcosm’. From this, three major advantages
are born: 1) an unbroken flow of movement is secured; 2) it becomes a brighter
space with no lighting interference, and 3) the multiplicity of expression
within the lines of the walls bring out movement in the space. The form of this
‘microcosm’ holds a sculptural interest as well. It could be said that, in a
way, this unique space was borne of the unintentionality of Hong Kong as a city,
rather than something that we produced.
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
- JOYCE, The Lee Gardens, BOUTIQUE – Case-Real – HONG KONG
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