12
Oct 2009
By Karen Cilento — Filed under: Awarded Competitions ,Monuments and Memorials ,News , ACME, Chungju, South Korea, UN Memorial
© ACME
More about the memorial after the break.
Similar to how the UN is formed by individual nations, the memorial entails a cube comprised of smaller “cells.” These cells, which are meant to represent the “collective nature of the UN’s identity” fuse together to create the final shape. Each piece functions differently as some provide exhibition space and others function as offices and restaurants. ACME explained that the “memorial should represent the nature of the United Nations, where many individual nations come together to create one entity, but without losing their individual identities.”
ACME, London
Kelvin Chu , Daewon Kwak , Friedrich Ludwig , Isabel de la Mora , Monica Prenziuso, Teresa Yeh
Yooshin Architects & Engineers
Kim Chidok, Daehee Lee, Samyong Park, Daeoh Kwon, Hyunkyoung Oh, Jungheum Yun
- © ACME
- Site plan
- Section
- Section
- Groundfloor, Assembly Hall
- 1st floor, Assembly plan
- 3rd floor, lecture halls
- 7th floor, education offices
- 12th floor
- 13th floor
- 14th floor
- 15th floor
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