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Pan Am Flagship Store

NiiiZ Design Lab

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Bronze
front - Studio Gothic
Facade, Entrance - Studio Gothic
display zone - Studio Gothic
front - Studio Gothic

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Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
JURY VOTES
Single-Brand Store
6.60
5.99
7.13
5.80
6.38
Emma Maxwell
Emma Maxwell Founder at Emma Maxwell Design
6.35
6.33
6.88
5.22
6.2
Eunice Wu
Eunice Wu Property Director at China Merchants Shekou
6
5
5
5
5.25
Samar Younes
Samar Younes Founder and Chief Imagination Officer at Samaritual
Successes: Great contrast of materi...
7.5
5.7
7.89
6.6
6.92
Niels Kramer
Niels Kramer Creative Director EMEA at Tétris Design & Build
Like entering a porthole into a new...
7.5
7.5
8
5
7
Corey Martin
Corey Martin Principal Designer at Hacker Architects
I love the juxtaposition between th...
7
5.7
9.09
6
6.95
Philipp Schlauch
Philipp Schlauch Senior Workplace Consultant at Drees & Sommer
Kinda cool and exactly what i would...
7.5
6
7.75
6
6.81
Chantal Vos
Chantal Vos Associate Partner at Kraaijvanger Architects
7
7
7
5
6.5
David del Valle
David del Valle Founder at Del Valle Studio
5.94
5.99
7.97
6.15
6.51
Hongdi Li
Hongdi Li Founder and Creative Director at Studio Lux
5
5
4.5
5
4.88
Hihope Zhu
Hihope Zhu Founder and Chief Architect at Archihope
5.43
5.46
7.5
7.01
6.35
Collin Burry
Collin Burry Design Principal at Gensler
Wacky and wonderful - a bit tough d...
7.84
7.16
7.46
6.94
7.35
Vincent Zhang
Vincent Zhang Cofounder at Domani Group Limited
6.19
5
6.5
5.67
5.84
Client
SJ Group
Floor area
310 ㎡
Completion
2022
Social Media
Instagram
Construction

PAN AM Flagship store Seongsu-dong is definitely one of the hot spots in Korea these days. Previously, Seongsu-dong was filled with manufacturing shops, including printing shops, hand-crafted shoe shops, and a leather industry. Presenting the past and present in harmony, it has a unique and distinctive culture unlike any other place, now attracting the young generation. Our client, who had already opened the LCDC flagship store in Seongsu-dong, asked us to reflect the area's regional characteristics as well as the perspective of the current era, leaving the existing image of PAN AM behind, the retro and old airline that anyone is familiar with, just like in the movie 'Catch me if you can'. 

In accordance with our client's request, we focused on the fact that the factory which used to manufacture tapes is now transformed into a new place, keeping the original space, through all the changes in time and the pandemic, and came up with the design concept of "borderline of the ordinary and extraordinary". The "borderline of the ordinary and extraordinary" that the designer had in mind meant a change, not a separation. 

While maintaining the old look of the factory, which used to manufacture tapes, the designer intended to have the regional characteristics of Seongsu-dong and the brand concept of PAN AM coexist in this newly transformed space. For that, the design concept is represented in a way that the separation between the old space and the new space is vague, by installing the lights on the glass on top of the sticky residue of tapes on the floor, and these floor lights, unlike the ordinary ceiling lights, create the extraordinary mood of upside-down. 

Also, semi-transparent poly materials and glass are used for the walls dividing the space in order to give out the overlapping feeling of each space, and the openings of each space are designed to be connected to other spaces or the flow of movement so that the spaces and the flow of movement can remain vague and unseparated. In addition, the metal frames composing the walls are often overlapped, misaligned, or sometimes used as the element connecting the spaces, so that the borderlines can be seen as either connected or disconnected. 

In order to reflect the regional characteristics of Seongsu-dong, the main entrance to the space and the facade area has the cylinder entrance inserted into the old concrete wall of the factory, in a 'T' shape, to divide the flow of movement between the entry and the exit, and the inner space is obscured from the outside to induce curiosity about the inside. Also, the cylinder-shaped passage from the entrance to the inner space is designed to create an excited feeling before a trip. This entire process of entering the space through the transitional space is meant to represent the metaphor of moving from ordinary reality (outside) to extraordinary space (inside).