Julia Kim
juliak600@outlook.com
Resume
About Me
JULIRO: 
Spring 2025
Design Studio 4B
Instructor:  Marcelo Spina + Alejandro Loor
In Collaboration with: Elizabeth Dharmaputra + Hirotaka Kato

Contemporary museum interiors often reflect a certain rigidity. Today, these institutions contain guided circulation, curated lighting, and programs that blend into one another. They act as containers for exhibitions and artifacts, but also house informal gathering areas, gift shops, auditoriums, libraries, and dining.
In a similar way that bento boxes organize compartments within a single tray, these programmatic zones coexist in a shared institutional shell. But the question we asked was—can this container logic be reframed to produce a more expressive and spatially diverse museum experience?

Working with a site already defined by strong formal identities, we began by analyzing the existing axes and circulation patterns. We noticed that circulation across the Nelson-Atkins campus was largely linear and rarely engaged the broader landscape in meaningful ways.

Our proposal introduces a looped system of circulation, enabling continuous and multi-directional movement through the existing buildings and our addition. This loop softens the rigidity of the original layout and turns the museum into a more dynamic, unfolding experience.

To challenge the redundancy of traditional museum interiors, we lifted the gallery and exhibition space above the rest of the museum. This creates a strong spatial hierarchy, in which the gallery floats as a distinct zone while the lower levels operate more fluidly as a cultural and social platform.

The bento-box logic is still in place—but it has shifted. Its compartments are now layered, distributed, and slightly unstable. They no longer sit neatly beside each other but instead intersect, open, and overlap. Transparency is introduced not just through glass, but through the layering of solids and voids, revealing a loose system of interdependent volumes.

Borrowing from the tradition of museum dioramas that offer windows into curated worlds, we represented our project through three constructed boxes—each one a stage, a scene, a reality. These boxes are built as miniature theatrical sets—white on the outside, but inside they are textured, lit, and inhabited. Each box is photographed with care: warm glows, saturated shadows, wallpaper textures, painted objects—transforming architectural representation into something experiential, cinematic, and alive. From white to pink to violet, the palette becomes another tool of spatial storytelling.

First Vignette:
We zoom into the elevated gallery, revealing the main exhibition hall. In this image, the interior is lined with paintings, artifacts, and lit models—each placed with precision. The image captures how the gallery floats just above the landscape, how the vertical circulation cores pierce and anchor the space. This vignette speaks to the monumentality and autonomy of the exhibition zone—detached, yet foundational.

Second Vignette:
Here we descend into the underground cultural center, where the auditorium and lobby unfold in a compressed and more shadowed spatial field. This box captures the idea of instability in the bento framework—the compartment is thicker, heavier, and more sectional. The lighting is dimmer, and the program feels more intimate. The design of this level should be described—how does the architecture support the atmosphere of gathering or pause?

Third Vignette:
Finally, we shift horizontally to show the connection between our building and the Steven Holl Bloch addition. The landscape bleeds into the box; distant views toward the river anchor the image. This vignette brings environment and site into the frame—

Each of these constructed boxes offers a moment—self-contained, atmospheric, specific—yet still part of a coherent spatial narrative.

By using compartmentalization as a spatial tool, we’ve reframed the idea of the museum as a static container. Instead of suppressing difference within one continuous interior, we embraced separation and instability as a way to give each program its own logic, atmosphere, and identity.

The elevated gallery created a clear vertical tension—a layering that allows programs below to be more porous, active, and performative. The museum becomes a tableau vivant—a staged composition of volumes, views, and events. A living architecture. A sequence of set pieces. A bento box reimagined as a cinematic museum.



Works
01. PCH
02. JULIRO: A Bento Museum
03. SCI-ARC Extension
04. 067
05. West Adams Housing
06. Precedent Studies