초록 열기/닫기 버튼

In order to preserve the historical and cultural values of the modern industrial heritage and to find a way to interact with the modern industrial heritage, which has been cut off from the city, this study proposes a plan for urban regeneration as an alternative to restore the modern industrial heritage to a space for nature, the city, and the people at the Jeonnam Textile and Ilshin Textile factory sites, which are symbols of industrialization in Gwangju and Jeollanam-do. The contents of the study are as follows. First, the concept and elements of the place and the placeness are identified as a theoretical background. Second, the properties and the characteristics of the boundary space as a medium to establish the relationship between the areas are figured out. Third, an architectural plan as an alternative to sustainable urban space revitalization is proposed. The contents of the architectural plan proposed in this study are summarized as follows. First, in order to redefine the relationship between the city and the nature around the proposed site, re-establish the boundary as a place where interaction can take place. Second, at the re-established boundary between nature and city, plan the frame element as an interact boundary combined with the existing industrial heritage, which plays a functional role of vertical and horizontal circulation naturally connecting nature and the city. Third, a transition space using existing buildings is planned around the railway that carried coal in the past and the road that crosses the site, which reveals the previously invisible boundary and expands two different areas. The existing buildings, which contain new programs by transforming the various physical boundaries that make up the space, can restore the historical and cultural value of the proposed site as a modern industrial heritage and return it to a space for people. The architectural plan proposed in this study is intended to provide alternatives to urban space revitalization that can restore the modern industrial heritage to a space for nature, the city, and the people.