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Monday, September 20, 2021

MOSP Bakery and Cafe / ATMOROUND - ArchDaily

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MOSP Bakery and Cafe / ATMOROUND

© Woo-Jin Park© Woo-Jin Park© Woo-Jin Park© Woo-Jin Park+ 40

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Text description provided by the architects. There are various forms of relaxation. To capture this, we drew the diverse form of relaxation on a long sheet of paper, then folded it while cutting out the openings with scissors. We built MOSP: a place that reflects each individual’s form of relaxation. Openings between these walls act as a vent, making the place a space of relationship without boundaries. “MOSP”, located in Daejeon city, is under the foot of a mountain. Daejeon’s downtown can be seen from the front and Bomunsan Mountain from the back.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
Plan
Plan
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

MOSP is located on the top, the fifth floor of the building. There are gentle stairs that flow from the ground of Bomunsan up to the cafe, which naturally leads visitors inside. The building has a somewhat vertical mass when viewed from the opposite side of Bomunsan. However, when you enter the café from Bomunsan, you’ll experience a low and gentle horizontal mass. Upon entering, the view of downtown Daejeon that unfolds from the terrace feels extraordinary. As you climb the gentle stairs, you’ll see that there is a sense of comfort infused in the interior of the café. We wanted the cafe to be spacious, but not vastly extensive. We wanted a cozy place for people to comfortably relax. We set up a long connected partition having openings and windows to reflect the diverse methods of relaxation.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Connecting openings: Through the gentle stairway, the first thing you see upon entering is the arch-shaped overlapping openings. The continuous foldage of a partition divides the interior space, imbuing a sense of inside and outside. Through these openings, two opposite sides of the “relaxing” space are connected. A long narrow table that pierces through the openings provides a place to rest, where you can sit and spend time quietly.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Illuminating openings: Light fills a semicircular wall and shines through the openings on it. This wall embraces the morning ray of sunlight that shines from the east side of Bomunsan Mountain. As you sit here and look out the front window, a green forest unfolds before you. Part of the floor is filled with water, which puts the sky under your feet, creating a space full of light that wholly embraces nature.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Windows in the garden: Beyond the semicircular wall of light, there is a staircase that seems like it would lead to a hidden place. This stairway leads you to a garden. This garden is a healing place for anyone, and also a great viewpoint for people to read and drink tea. Seeing Bomunsan through the windows in the garden, the boundaries between in and out become ambiguous, attracting us to the outside.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Leaning window: When creating this space, we thought of people leaning against a concaving glass window. So we gave it a deeper and wider space than others and made a window behind it to lean back.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Light inflecting window: We imagined people relaxing under sunlight as the sun moves from south to west of the café. We piled up glass blocks, hoping they would absorb the light and make the place cozier. With sunset scattering through glass block windows, imagery of cozy relaxation sits here.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Sitting window: Look through these long windows and see the city before you. There are seats by the windows. These windows capture the glow of sunset and let people observe the cityscape. Due to a partition, this place feels protruded out from the central inner space of the café. Therefore, while still inside, this place acts as an outer terrace and the tables become a railing. Sitting at a slightly ascended table and looking outside would be like seeing the view while leaning against a railing.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Working window: Windows by this place is not only for people who want to relax but also for people who need to work. These people are who we also wanted to not dismiss. Capturing the sincere moment of working in these windows almost seems like a scene from a movie.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

Partitions, the main axis of the café, are a boundary and a medium of the relationship as well. They create distinguished boundaries, from inside to outside, but also connect those boundaries through openings and windows. Partitions also connect the various shapes of relaxation forming in each space. These partitions give a different look for each MOSP space. While they distinguish movement and space, they do not completely cut each other off. Instead, they give the place a consistent aesthetic, which flows through each and every corner.

© Woo-Jin Park
© Woo-Jin Park

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MOSP Bakery and Cafe / ATMOROUND - ArchDaily
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