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Food brand Jongga's "Flavourverse" pop-up introduced Londoners to the popular Korean side dish kimchi through chef partnerships, immersive rooms, and unique shopping experiences.
LONDON—In South Korea, kimchi is a staple of many meals—but the popular side dish, made from salted and fermented vegetables, most commonly napa cabbage or Korean radish, may be less known to Western audiences. So when Jongga, one of Korea’s top kimchi brands, was expanding to London, the company knew it needed to go big to make an impact.
The result? The Jongga Flavourverse, a multi-room, immersive experience that introduced Londoners to the sights, sounds, and flavors of South Korea. “Jongga Kimchi is a storied brand with a rich heritage that is inextricably tied to Korean culture,” explained Aaron Taylor, associate creative director at global creative agency Amplify, which worked with Jongga on the ambitious activation. “Given the array of brand and cultural stories that we needed to tell and our audience’s lack of knowledge surrounding the brand, we knew that a singular space that held all of the experiences wouldn’t cut it.”
That strategic thinking led the team to create the three vastly different rooms. The highlight was Kimchi Alley, an eye-catching space inspired by Seoul architecture that featured a rotating residency of top London-based chefs, who each fused Jongga Kimchi with their signature cuisine. Each chef had their own weeklong residency in the space; the lineup included South Korean chef Judy Joo, who kicked off the activation with her restaurant Seoul Bird, followed by cult favorite Bad Boy Pizza Society, and finishing with chef Robin
The chefs were purposely chosen to reach Jongga’s target audience of millennials and Gen Z, noted Gareth Waughington, strategic partnerships account director at HUNTER, the PR firm for Jongga and its parent company, Daesang. “HUNTER created a clear partner selection criterion for Jongga," he explained. "Alongside authenticity and health benefits, versatility is a primary message for the brand. Blending different global flavors through the trend for ‘chaos cooking,’ as well as tapping into the current love for Korean cuisine, we wanted to show how Jongga can be used wonderfully within fusion food. We needed chefs whose menus could naturally incorporate kimchi—both at the pop-up and featured at their own restaurants for a limited season to drive additional buzz.”
The second room, the Kimchi Lab, gave guests a deeper look at the importance of kimchi in daily Korean life. “An immersive projection room, an incredibly detailed scale model of a traditional Korean village, and more brought the brand’s heritage and innovation to life through mediums that guests could easily connect with,” Taylor explained.
Installing the multi-room experience across three large, distinct buildings was no easy feat, noted Annie Vũ-Streader, executive producer at Amplify. “We brought a large amount of materials on site across the six-day install, at some points extending all the way up to the roof,” she said. “To ensure sufficient space and prevent any damage to the materials, we had to time each element carefully—essentially playing Tetris until everything was in place.”
But to the team, the hard work was worth it. “Some of our favorite moments involved the transition between rooms and seeing the surprise on guests’ faces as they continually stepped through spaces that looked nothing like what came before,” said Taylor. “We carefully crafted each of these moments to keep our audience on their toes and fully immerse them in the worlds we created.”
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