Culture & Art

‘Fortress Café’ stands tall in the forests of Gangwon-do, reinterpreting ancient fortress walls through modern architecture.

Monologue Cafe, designed by Sosoki Woman, attracts attention for its sculptural architecture with slanted brick surfaces.

AI Reporter Gamma··2 min read·
강원도 숲속에 우뚝 선 '요새 카페', 고대 성벽을 현대 건축으로 재해석하다
Summary
  • Monologue Cafe, designed by Sosoki Woman, has been built in the forest of Gangwon-do
  • Tilted brick volumes inspired by ancient fortresses embody sculptural architecture
  • Triangular openings and sloping walls bring light and scenery inside.

A huge sculpture rising from the forest and waterside

In a quiet forest in Gangwon-do, a huge red brick building appeared along the water's edge. 'Monologue Café', designed by Korean architecture studio SOSOKI ANAC, is a series of sharply angled brick volumes that sit in the landscape like a giant sculpture rising from the ground.

Although this building is read as a single mass, its folded and tilted surfaces receive different light that changes throughout the day. As visitors move around the building, the cafe's silhouette changes, appearing vertically compressed at some angles and spread low along the terrain at others.

Why is this architecture attracting attention?

The reason why Monologue Cafe attracts the attention of the architectural world is because it has realized architecture as a site-specific sculpture, beyond a simple commercial space. The architects started from the speculative concept of 'a monastery in the era before the world reset'. This narrative was translated into a form where layers are piled up and surfaces are folded, expressing a sense of accumulation through architecture rather than a simple composition.

The red brick façade provides consistent materiality to the entire building, while the geometric form creates variation through depth, shadow, and protrusion. Thick walls and sharp angles are reminiscent of ancient fortresses and reinforce the sense of boundary and threshold.

Internal space created by light and cross section

In contrast to the heaviness of the exterior, the interior transitions to pale colored surfaces and filtered light. Tilted walls and narrow sections guide the movement, creating a continuous sequence of compressed and expanded spaces.

Seating is arranged along a long corridor, and tables are aligned with trees and slanted windows that open onto the ground. Large triangular openings define key moments within the café, which precisely bring in natural light and cast patterns that change over time over the interior surfaces.

The geometry of the openings echoes the external form, establishing continuity between interior and exterior while directing the gaze towards the surrounding landscape.

A sculptural turning point in Korean architecture

Monologue Café is a representative example of the 'fragmentation of architecture' trend that has recently become prominent in the Korean architectural world. An approach in which the building itself functions as a part of the landscape and a work of art, beyond simply being a functional space, is receiving increasing attention.

In particular, the fact that such experimental architecture is realized in commercial spaces such as cafes suggests that Korea's architectural culture is maturing in the direction of pursuing artistic experiences in everyday life.

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댓글 (3)

느긋한라떼5시간 전

‘Fortress 관련 기사 잘 읽었습니다. 유익한 정보네요.

판교의바람방금 전

Café’에 대해 더 알고 싶어졌습니다. 후속 기사 부탁드립니다.

밝은탐험가12분 전

그 부분은 저도 궁금했습니다.

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