| Title |
A Restructured Design Approach for a Market-Warehouse Integrated Complex Facility Built Using the Storage Pillar System at Bangsan Market |
| Authors |
이태호(Lee, Tae Ho) ; 황세원(Hwang, Soe Won) |
| DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5659/JAIK.2026.42.3.121 |
| Keywords |
Urban Logistics Warehouse; Bangsan Market; Traditional Market Reconfiguration; Logistics Space Automation System (AS/RS); Storage Structure |
| Abstract |
The growth of e-commerce and fast delivery has pushed compact, highly automated urban logistics facilities into dense city centers. However,
these facilities often intensify traffic congestion, regulatory conflict, and inefficient land use, while traditional markets continue to decline
under online-dominant retail conditions. This study proposes an integrated architectural model that combines market and warehouse functions
into a single urban complex at Bangsan Market. Using a Storage-Structure system, automated logistics are co-located with public-facing
commercial space. The central mechanism is a rack-supported vertical storage pillar that integrates conveyors with two lifts: one distributes
inbound goods to each floor, while the other places items into assigned storage locations. This system shortens circulation paths and enables
precise inventory control. Programmatically, the complex supports shared or co-inventory systems for vendors and introduces consumer-oriented
amenities, including an online order pickup zone, a market-linked making and experience space that uses stored materials, and a
resource-reuse hub that collects offcuts and surplus stock for upcycling. These components broaden user choice, extend activity beyond buying
and selling, and reduce material waste while aligning traditional market routines with automated back-of-house operations. Spatially, the design
preserves the market’s porous edges so that the new logistics framework does not disrupt the fine-grained, irregular interior that allows stall
customization and spontaneous use. At the storage level, item-specific typologies respond to Bangsan Market’s merchandise profile, linking
front-of-house retail with back-of-house automation. |