요약2 |
The new Hanok, or the new Korean-style house, does not simply represent a whole Korean-style house currently being built, but represent an innovative output founding new significance and values not known or existent. The term Hanok is used with a very loose boundary in our society. Diverse types exist ranging from modern buildings having Korean-style space in a limited manner to traditional Korean-style house designated as a cultural property, and new attempts to succeed the merits of the traditional Hanok have been consistently presented as time passes. One of the problems is how and what to define the new Korean-style house in diverseness. Out of modern Korean-style house newly being built in accordance with modern living, a new Korean-style house should be applied to abstract concepts ‘a question about applying future-oriented Korean living culture based on Korean-style house to it’, beyond simply taking whether or not modernized space and facilities are accommodated into a new Korean-style house. In other words, to pursue fidelity to its traditional forms along with modern convenience is an essence of a new Korean-style house. A Korean-style house is regarded as a container that can put traditional Korean living culture, and form a spatial stage of ethnic culture, which has historical and cultural values. As such, a value of a new Korean-style house is originated from both as wooden structure and as traditional architecture. Therefore, to maintain high-class of Korean-style house while fitting to living culture for modern people, a prerequisite is to develop design technology such as establishing spatial modules and adopting BIM, to construct architectural archives of building techniques, rules and formalities, and members covering various precedents, and to develop new components such as interior and exterior finishing materials, equipment and apparatus. Through these, a new Korean-style house can respond various purposes nowadays including development of eco-friendly residence, use for tourism resources, creative succession of tradition, diversification of urban residence, and invigoration of single-detached houses. |