Architecture of South Korea
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File:Juhamnu Pavilion 02.jpg.]]
South Korean architecture refers to any architecture in South Korea, which includes architecture from Neolithic–7th century (B.C.E.), three-kingdoms of Korea, Goryeo, Joseon, Japanese occupation, Korean War, and modern architecture.
Historic architecture
{{for|Korean Historic Architectures|Korean architecture}}
Located in Seoul is the Gwangtonggwan, the oldest continuously-operating bank building in Korea.{{Cite news
| last = Lee
| first = Jun-Ho
| author-link =
| last2 =
| first2 =
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| title = 最古 은행건물 우리銀 종로점 (The Oldest Bank Building the Woori Bank Jongno Branch)
| newspaper = Kyunghyang Sinmun
| pages =
| date = 2005-08-14
| url = http://news.khan.co.kr/kh_news/art_print.html?artid=200508141743271
}} It was registered as one of city's protected monuments on March 5, 2001.
{{cite web
| last =
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| author-link =
| title = 광통관 (廣通館) (Gwangtonggwan)
| publisher=Cultural Heritage Administration
| year = 2002
| url = http://www.cha.go.kr/korea/heritage/search/Culresult_Db_View.jsp?mc=KS_01_02_01&VdkVgwKey=23,00190000,11#
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| accessdate = 2009-04-05}}
Joseon Architecture
File:20151003최광모RX10DSC03016.JPG|A typical yangban house in Gangneung
File:Ojukheon 20220501 042.jpg|Trees and flowers were carefully arranged to make a nice view.
File:Seongyojang 0323.jpg|Seongyojang, a grandiose country house for a prominent yangban family in Gangneung
File:Korea-Gangneung-Seongyojang-02.jpg|The presence of gulttuk or chimney is a unique characteristic of Korean architecture which is rarely found in its other Asian counterparts.
File:Seongyojang 0318.jpg|Entrance to house
File:Seoul, South Korea (50608759318).jpg|Changdeokgung or Changdeok Royal Palace
File:Korea-Seoul-Changdeokgung-30.jpg|Another pavilion in Changdeok Royal Palace.
File:경복궁 근정전(勤政殿).jpg|Gyeongbokgung or Gyeongbok Royal Palace
Post-division architecture
File:Blue House, Seoul (cropped).jpg]]
File:Korea France Bilateral Exchange 15 (25896826952).jpg]]
American models heavily influenced new Korean buildings of any importance, with domestic architecture both civil and rural keeping to traditional buildings, building techniques, and using local materials, and local vernacular styles. The pragmatic need to rebuild a country devastated by exploitative colonization, then a civil war, led to ad hoc buildings with no particular styles, extended repeatedly, and a factory system of simple cheap expendable buildings. As few Korean cities had a grid-system, and were often given limits by mountains, few if any urban landscapes had a sense of distinction; by the mid-1950s, rural areas were underfunded, urban areas overfilled, and urban sprawl began with little money to build distinctive important buildings.
Image:Seoul-Namdaemun-at.night-01.jpg at night in Seoul]]
Buildings were built as quickly as money and demand would allow in a workman-like anonymous way, but without individual identities. Architects were almost to a man trained in the United States, and brought American design, perspective, and methods without much recourse to the local community look and feel. As the need for housing for workers increased, traditional hanok villages were razed, hundreds of simple cheap apartments were put up very fast, and bedroom communities on the periphery of the urban centres grew, built and financed as company housing. Little effort was made to have a sense of an architectural aesthetic.
This urgency for simple fast housing left most Korean downtowns faceless, consisting of rows and rows of bland concrete towers for work or living and local neighborhoods rebuilt with cheap materials. Little or no attempt was made for planning, if planning had been possible. In the countryside, traditional building continued.
Well into the 1980s, Korea had architecture, but its buildings had little aesthetic, a limited sense of design, and did not integrate into the neighbourhoods or culture. Awareness that functionality had reached its limits came quickly as Korea moved into the world through sports culture.
Sports architecture transited to a Korean style.
Image:Seoul Cheonggyecheon night.jpg|Cheonggyecheon stream at night in downtown Seoul
Image:Seoul.Tower.01.jpg|Seoul tower
Sports architecture
South Korea won the 1986 Asian Games and the 1988 Olympic games, which spurred waves of new building activity. To market the country globally, international architects were encouraged to submit designs, introducing alternative concepts for modern architecture that began to put style and form ahead of spartan practicality. Historically, sports architecture has occupied the most money and the greatest expression of form identity within Korea. Hundreds of billions of won have been spent on defining Korea as a sports mecca with the architecture leading the way.
As in the North, most of the largest projects in the South were government sponsored works: but instead worked in confined, rather than open spaces, and worked with huge amounts of enclosed space, primarily in the state subsidized hugely expensive sports architecture. Korea since the 1980s had its most famous architectural works driven by sports: the Asian Games (1986), the Olympics (1988), and the 2002 World Cup stadia, as well as great support being given by the chaebols such as the Samsung Group which itself owned the sports teams for marketing purposes.
Important architects at this time and their works often led by the atelier-style architectural co-operative Space Group of Korea were:
- Park Kil-ryong
- Jungup Kim or Kim Chung-up - Trained in France and designed the Olympic Memorial Gate/World Peace Gate, 1988.
- Jongseong Kim - Weight Lifting Gymnasium, Olympic Park, 1986.
- Kim Su-keun who trained in Tokyo - Olympic Stadium. 1984. Total area is 133,649metres³, 100,000seats, 245×180m diameter, 830 m in perimeter.
- Gyusung Woo - Olympic Village, 1984.
It wasn't until the late 1980s and early 1990s that an entirely new generation of Korean architects had the freedom and the financing to build Korean architecture in a distinct Korean manner. This was a result of architects studying and training in Europe, Canada, and even in South America, and seeing the need for more of a sense of unique style, and more sophisticated materials.
There was a new determination that nationalistic architectural elements had to be revived and refined. Buildings had to mean something within their cultural context.
Technology infrastructure
Naro Space Center is the country's spaceport. It is built on 4.95 million square meters of reclaimed land in Goheung County, South Jeolla. Scheduled to be completed by the end of 2007 or early 2008, the first launch from the spaceport was in August 2009.
Future architecture
File:Torre de Incheon.png compared to the World Trade Center's twin towers]]
{{Outdated|1=section|2=2013|inaccurate=yes|date=October 2022}}
A number of supertall structures are planned for South Korea:
- The 102 Incheon Tower is a twin tower skyscraper, the main feature of a {{convert|13000|acre|ha}} urban development referred as New Songdo City, located in Incheon. Construction on the $3 billion, {{Convert|613|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} project began in 2013.
- The Busan Lotte Town Tower is a planned 108-floor, {{convert|510.1|m|ft|abbr=on}} skyscraper, part of an extensive riverfront development in Busan. It was planned to be completed in 2019, but construction was halted in 2013 due to funding issues.