Design library opens in Seoul

Hyundai Card Design Library opens in Seoul

News: a library dedicated to design has opened in South Korea's capital city, offering access to over 11,000 books chosen by an international team of curators and critics.

The Hyundai Card Design Library is backed by the country's largest credit card issuer, which claims "there are few design museums and libraries in Korea, whereas Korean colleges every year churn out more than 30,000 novice designers."

Hyundai Card Design Library opens in Seoul

A team including British critic and Golden Lion-winner Justin McGuirk, MoMA curator Paola Antonelli and New York architecture and design journalist Alexandra Lange was brought in to select the books, which cover topics including architecture, industrial design, graphics, photography and branding.

Of the 11,678 books selected for the library's shelves, more than 7000 aren't available anywhere else in South Korea and over 2600 are either out of print or very rare.

Hyundai Card Design Library opens in Seoul

The firm also hopes the initiative will appeal to a cultured group of potential customers: "It makes people feel that if you have a Hyundai Card, you get access to an enriched lifestyle," says a spokeswoman.

While most libraries are open to the general public or to academic communities, this library can only be accessed by the company's credit cardholders and their guests, and then a maximum of eight times each month.

Hyundai Card Design Library opens in Seoul

Alongside the book collection, the library contains a cafe and an exhibition space, while on the second floor is an area for reading and discussing ideas around a large steel table. The top floor contains a small attic-like space inspired by a reading room in an old Korean palace where princes could concentrate quietly on their studies.

The curatorial team also wrote commentaries on nearly 1000 of the selected books, which can be read through an iPad app available to library users.

Located in Gahoe-dong, an area once home to Seoul's scholars and noble classes, the library was designed by architect Choi Wook of Seoul studio One o One.

Hyundai Card Design Library opens in Seoul

Earlier this year we reported that a fully digital public library without a single book is set to open this autumn in San Antonio, Texas, while in New York, architectural firm Foster + Partners is planning to completely overhaul the city's public library – see all libraries on Dezeen.

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“Why should the poor live in slums if there are empty offices in the city?” asks Justin McGuirk

Curator Justin McGuirk tells us why his Golden Lion-winning installation about a community living in a vertical slum in Caracas could set an example for new forms of urban housing, in this movie we filmed at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

“Why should the majority of the poor in countries like Venezuela be forced to live in the slums around the edge of cities if there are empty office towers in the city centres?,” he says.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

McGuirk teamed up with architects Urban-Think Tank and photographer Iwan Bann to create the Torre David/Gran Horizonte exhibition and restaurant, which presents the findings of a year-long research project.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

The 45-storey Torre David skyscraper was designed for a financial organisation in the 1990s, but construction was abandoned following the the death of the developer and squatters began moving in. The building is now home to around 3000 residents, who have adapted the concrete shell by partitioning off rooms to suit their needs.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

“When you look inside you will find that the apartments are actually like any middle class apartments in the world,” said Urban-Think Tank founder Alfredo Brillembourg at the preview on Monday. “So this is not a slum; the slum is in your head.”

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Photographs by Iwan Bann displayed in the Arsenale exhibition show how businesses and groups also occupy the building, including factories, hairdressers a gym and even a church. ”We’ve mapped how people have built a whole infrastructure and city themselves,” said Baan.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

The pop-up Venezuelan restaurant brings a flavour of Caracas to the exhibition, illustrating the team’s belief that “sharing a meal is the best way to establish common ground for a discussion.”

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

We also reported on the project earlier this week, when it was awarded the Golden Lion for best project at the biennale.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

See all our coverage of the Venice Architecture Biennale »

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Photography is by Iwan Baan.

Here’s some more information from Urban-Think Tank:


Torre David, a 45-story office tower in Caracas designed by the distinguished Venezuelan architect Enrique Gómez, was almost complete when it was abandoned following the death of its developer, David Brillembourg, in 1993 and the collapse of the Venezuelan economy in 1994.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Today, it is the improvised home of a community of more than 750 families, living in an extra- legal and tenuous occupation that some have called a vertical slum.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Alfredo Brillembourg and Hubert Klumpner, along with their research and design teams at Urban-Think Tank and ETH Zürich, spent a year studying the physical and social organization of this ruin-turned-home. Where some only see a failed development project, U-TT has conceived it as a laboratory for the study of the informal.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

In this exhibit and in their forthcoming book, Torre David: Informal Vertical Communities, the architects lay out their vision for practical, sustainable interventions in Torre David and similar informal settlements around the world.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

They argue that the future of urban development lies in collaboration among architects, private enterprise, and the global population of slum-dwellers. Brillembourg and Klumpner issue a call to arms to their fellow architects to see in the informal settlements of the world a potential for innovation and experimentation, with the goal of putting design in the service of a more equitable and sustainable future.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

In the spirit of the Biennale’s theme, Common Ground, the installation takes the form of a Venezuelan arepa restaurant, creating a genuinely social space rather than a didactic exhibition space. The residents of Torre David have similarly created a variety of common grounds—for sports, leisure, worship, and meetings—that reinforce the cohesive nature of this settlement.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Even before its opening, this installation has become controversial in the Venezuelan architectural community. Many are dismayed that the nation’s architectural accomplishments are “represented” by a never-completed and “ruined” work; others argue that the exhibit condones the Venezuelan government’s tacit and explicit support of illegal seizure and occupation of property. In fact, none of these positions reflects the true nature and purpose of the exhibit.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Above: the installation at the Arsenale

It, and its creators, avoid taking political sides, arguing that Torre David represents not Venezuelan architecture but rather an experiment in informal/formal hybridity and a critical moment in the global phenomenon of informal living.

Torre David/Gran Horizonte by Justin McGuirk, Urban-Think Tank and Iwan Baan

Above: the restaurant

With the aim of developing the debate over Torre David and similar sites in other cities, the installation includes many of the letters and newspaper articles that have appeared in response to the announcement of this exhibition.

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Justin McGuirk and Urban-Think Tank win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

Urban-Think Tank and Justin McGuirk win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

Dezeen Wire: architecture critic Justin McGuirk (pictured above, holding the award) and the Urban-Think Tank team of Venezuela (also pictured above) have won the Golden Lion for best project at the Venice Architecture Biennale for their Torre David installation and cafe.

Urban-Think Tank and Justin McGuirk win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

The project documents the Torre David vertical slum in Caracas, the 45-storey concrete frame of a corporate office building that was never completed and is now inhabited by people who would otherwise live in the city’s slums.

Urban-Think Tank and Justin McGuirk win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

Photographs by Iwan Baan record the culture that’s grown up there while the pop-up Venezuelan restaurant, called Gran Horizonte, brings a taste of public life in Caracas to the Arsenale exhibition.

Urban-Think Tank and Justin McGuirk win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

“This exhibit believes that sharing a meal is the best way to establish common ground for a discussion,” says Urban-Think Tank in relation to biennale director David Chipperfield’s theme (discussed in our interview here).

Urban-Think Tank and Justin McGuirk win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

See all our stories about the Venice Architecture Biennale »

Urban-Think Tank and Justin McGuirk win best project at Venice Architecture Biennale

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“The market cannot solve the housing crisis” – Justin McGuirk


Dezeen Wire:
 in an article for Domus magazine, design critic Justin McGuirk examines the social and physical decline of London’s social housing, discussing the part played by luxury real-estate developers and how architects have been held accountable.

Council housing blocks in Hackney, Newham, and Southwark are cited as examples, as McGuirk calls for the British government to accept responsibility for the city’s housing crisis and to work with architects to protect residents from the ruthlessness of the property market.

Read the full article here »

See also: our interview with McGuirk on the future of design criticism.

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Interview: Justin McGuirk at Dezeen Studio

Milan 2012: in this interview filmed at Dezeen Studio, Guardian critic Justin McGuirk gives us his take on the future of design criticism, as fast reactions on platforms like Twitter and Facebook are balanced by long-form analysis in e-books and online journals.

He goes on to discuss how the fetishisation of traditional crafts by mass-producers is pushing design in a new direction and agrees with previous guest journalist Joseph Grima that the arrival of hacking culture and open-source production is the big story in Milan this year, describing it as the antithesis to the luxury design industry that the city normally centres around.

We published an abridged version of this interview in our Thursday TV show (below).

Dezeen was filming and editing all week from Dezeen Studio powered by Jambox at MOST. See all our TV shows here.

“From handicraft to digicraft: Milan’s furniture fair looks to the future” – Guardian


Dezeen Wire:
design critic Justin McGuirk writes about the focus on alternative means of production, open-source design and crowd-funding that permeated this year’s Milan furniture fair in his column for the Guardian newspaper.

McGuirk talked to Dezeen about these issues when he popped into Dezeen Studio powered by Jambox at MOST last week – watch the interview in our daily show from Milan here.

We also spoke to editor-in-chief of Domus magazine Joseph Grima about The Future in the Making show he curated that’s all about collaboration, open design, crowd-sourcing and hacking, and interviewed curator Beatrice Galilee at Hacked Lab where workshops, demonstrations and happenings took over the city’s most famous department store all week.

See all our coverage from Milan here.

Justin McGuirk reflects on twoColombian cities – The Guardian


Dezeen Wire:
 design critic Justin McGuirk examines the politically driven design and development that has taken place in Colombian capital Bogotá in recent years and reflects on the successes and failures when compared to the advancement of second city Medellín – The Guardian

Watch a movie about the Coliseos sports centre in Medellín here, which is one the buildings mentioned in the article.

Bacteria and pedal power could be the future of kitchens – The Guardian


Dezeen Wire:
design critic Justin McGuirk says that a kitchen concept by Dutch electrical company Philips that uses decomposition to generate methane gas for cooking is an example of how we may “have to get more comfortable with bacteria and with putrefaction’s role in our ecosystem” – The Guardian

McGuirk claims the Microbial kitchen concept‘s “steampunk” aesthetic offers “an alternative vision to the clinical kitchen,” and also mentions the trend for low-tech kitchen appliances, such as designer Christoph Thetard’s pedal-powered devices, which he says represent a reaction to the impending energy crisis.

Last year Dezeen published a report on Food and Design, including examples of low-tech gadgets for preserving and preparing ingredients and concepts for growing food in the kitchen.

Justin McGuirk urges governments to get designers on board


Dezeen Wire:
in his latest article in The Guardian, design critic Justin McGuirk explains how the Finnish government’s use of design thinking offers an exemplar for other states and big businesses who need to generate creative solutions to large social problems.

Justin McGuirk urges governments to get designers on board


Dezeen Wire:
in his latest article in The Guardian, design critic Justin McGuirk explains how the Finnish government’s use of design thinking offers an exemplar for other states and big businesses who need to generate creative solutions to large social problems.