080 PROJECT MOYEOGA
MoYeoGa means a house in which to live
together, but it also means ‘to gather’
in Gyeongsang-do dialect. In reality, 30
members of 8 families here gathered to
discuss the project with their architect,
select the final site, and to determine the
house design.
It first began with two families. Oh Sinwook
joined forces with an old acquaintance, who
dreamt of a house for living together and
had long been an occupant in collective
housing for cooperative childcare. More
members joined one by one to eventually
make up eight households.
It was not easy to match up each other’s
needs at the beginning. Some were worried
about leaving their apartments and others
were reluctant to share their terrace with
others. The residents gathered to deliver
their opinions on living together and tried to
address each other’s complaints, and as a
result even the share in space was adjusted.
It occurred to me that, aside from the
difficulty in the process behind constructing
this house, there would be a lot of
problems after beyond occupation, such
as maintenance and cleaning as they don’t
have a caretaker. However, MoYeoGa’s
residents said that there is no difficulty
in tackling the cleaning and fixing as and
when necessary. It felt like a natural and
open process, of note particularly when
the construction site manager who visited
with me conversed with the residents on
details of the building. Showing a book
about community life to me, one of the
interviewed residents revealed that the
merits of community described in the book
seemed exaggerated at first, but now it
had come to be experienced as a reality.
Someone told me about a noise complaint
that had arisen regarding a resident who
plays the drums. However, it had become
acceptable once they were living everyday
face to face, in the same space.
MoYeoGa’s architect has managed to put
two contrasting ideas in one project: to
have one’s own space and to live together.
The opinions of the families and individuals
were reflected in the design and a natural
network has found realization in their
efforts. As a result, people are creating a
community, and have become gradually
accepting of each other.
To create a new type of multifamily housing
different from the existing apartment
houses, architects must focus on the
relationship between the exclusive area
and non-exclusive one. Here, they blur the
boundary between the two areas and insert
intermediate or transitional spaces. They
adjust the closing of the exclusive area
itself or alleviate it at various connection
points. They have also planned a special
meeting space. The focus is on how much
remains closed or open, so that people can
A House for
Cohabitation
Lim Sunghun
professor, Tongmyong University
unit 103
roof top garden
unit 103
frontyard
frontyardunit 102
unit 202
balcony
unit 302
roof top garden
unit 402
roof top garden
unit 402
terrace unit 302terrace
public
terrace
public
terrace
unit 301
terrace
unit 201
terrace
pubilc space
(MoYeo-bang)
unit 401
roof top garden
public
roof top garden
public
frontyard
public pool
/ play deck
Diagram
080 PROJECT MOYEOGA
MoYeoGa means a house in which to live
together, but it also means ‘to gather’
in Gyeongsang-do dialect. In reality, 30
members of 8 families here gathered to
discuss the project with their architect,
select the final site, and to determine the
house design.
It first began with two families. Oh Sinwook
joined forces with an old acquaintance, who
dreamt of a house for living together and
had long been an occupant in collective
housing for cooperative childcare. More
members joined one by one to eventually
make up eight households.
It was not easy to match up each other’s
needs at the beginning. Some were worried
about leaving their apartments and others
were reluctant to share their terrace with
others. The residents gathered to deliver
their opinions on living together and tried to
address each other’s complaints, and as a
result even the share in space was adjusted.
It occurred to me that, aside from the
difficulty in the process behind constructing
this house, there would be a lot of
problems after beyond occupation, such
as maintenance and cleaning as they don’t
have a caretaker. However, MoYeoGa’s
residents said that there is no difficulty
in tackling the cleaning and fixing as and
when necessary. It felt like a natural and
open process, of note particularly when
the construction site manager who visited
with me conversed with the residents on
details of the building. Showing a book
about community life to me, one of the
interviewed residents revealed that the
merits of community described in the book
seemed exaggerated at first, but now it
had come to be experienced as a reality.
Someone told me about a noise complaint
that had arisen regarding a resident who
plays the drums. However, it had become
acceptable once they were living everyday
face to face, in the same space.
MoYeoGa’s architect has managed to put
two contrasting ideas in one project: to
have one’s own space and to live together.
The opinions of the families and individuals
were reflected in the design and a natural
network has found realization in their
efforts. As a result, people are creating a
community, and have become gradually
accepting of each other.
To create a new type of multifamily housing
different from the existing apartment
houses, architects must focus on the
relationship between the exclusive area
and non-exclusive one. Here, they blur the
boundary between the two areas and insert
intermediate or transitional spaces. They
adjust the closing of the exclusive area
itself or alleviate it at various connection
points. They have also planned a special
meeting space. The focus is on how much
remains closed or open, so that people can
A House for
Cohabitation
Lim Sunghun
professor, Tongmyong University
unit 103
roof top garden
unit 103
frontyard
frontyardunit 102
unit 202
balcony
unit 302
roof top garden
unit 402
roof top garden
unit 402
terrace unit 302terrace
public
terrace
public
terrace
unit 301
terrace
unit 201
terrace
pubilc space
(MoYeo-bang)
unit 401
roof top garden
public
roof top garden
public
frontyard
public pool
/ play deck
Diagram