Curated Inspiration
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Interior design

Gentle Monster

Haus Nowhere Seoul

Curated by Jacob Egeberg
  • PhotographerCourtesy of Haus Nowhere
  • Creative DirectorHankook Kim
  • ArchitectChanjoong Kim
  • Interior DesignerTim Teven Studio

Jacob Egeberg Gentle Monster’s 14 story, Seoul flagship store, created under the theme “The Future Returned,” pushes the boundaries of art and interior design within a uncompromising, fully realized universe. With a strong aesthetic narrative and meticulous attention to detail, the store stages a visionary future that inspires both interior design and the understanding of retail space as a form of branding.

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Haus Nowhere

Opened in September 2025 in Seoul’s Seongsu-dong district, Haus Nowhere Seoul is not a conventional store but a multi-level, immersive environment conceived by IICOMBINED, the group behind Gentle Monster, Tamburins, Nudake, ATiiSSU, and Nuflaat. Spanning 14 floors, the project reframes retail as an experiential narrative, where storytelling, atmosphere, and emotion take precedence over products.

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Visitors are invited to wander through a sequence of sculptural, theatrical environments, encountering AI-driven figures, animatronic installations, and surreal juxtapositions – such as the giant silver-armored dachshund Sunshine or Max Siedentopf’s tidal wave of black bags with a solitary golden highlight – that redefine the act of shopping as exploration rather than transaction. Each floor introduces a distinct mood, from contemplative intimacy to hallucinatory spectacle, crafting a journey that emphasizes pause, curiosity, and discovery over consumption.

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Architecture as Narrative and Atmosphere

Architect Chanjoong Kim of THE_SYSTEM_LAB designed Haus Nowhere to operate as a vertical manifesto of experience-driven architecture. The exterior balances brutalist solidity with cinematic fluidity: raw concrete walls communicate weight and material honesty, while curved, tinted windows introduce motion, reflection, and ambiguity.

The 14-storey tower asserts itself against Seongsu-dong’s industrial backdrop as a new urban anchor, signaling ambition and experimentation. Inside, the spatial narrative unfolds through careful sequencing of materials, lighting, and scale. Gradients of light guide visitors emotionally, with shadows and highlights shaping perception, while raw concrete transitions to polished, sculptural surfaces that emphasize tactility and rhythm. Each level becomes a micro-world, where floor-to-ceiling installations, mirrored surfaces, scented zones, and immersive displays dissolve the boundaries between gallery, stage, and store. The building is not a neutral container but a protagonist in the brand’s story, turning architecture into a vehicle for emotion and engagement.

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Interior Design and Functional Art

Within Haus Nowhere’s seven office floors, Tim Teven Studio collaborated with Gentle Monster’s in-house design team to develop a series of custom furniture that merges sculptural experimentation with everyday functionality. Bespoke desks, modular storage units, and meeting tables are rich in hand-crafted detail yet pragmatically equipped with cable channels, adjustable shelving, and integrated storage, demonstrating how artisanal methods can scale without losing individuality. This approach allows the workplace to reflect the same narrative sensibility as the public floors: each piece of furniture feels intentional, tactile, and expressive while supporting collaboration and efficiency.

Combined with the immersive retail floors, this attention to materiality, scale, and sensory experience positions Haus Nowhere as a holistic environment where architecture, design, and brand converge, offering a vision of retail, work, and culture as intertwined, emotionally resonant experiences.

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