W-Window House by ALPHAville

This shimmering steel house in Kyoto by Japanese architects ALPHAville towers above its vernacular neighbours.

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Triangular cut-aways create light wells on two opposite sides of the building, where all the windows are lined up on top of one another.

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Inside the house are three split-level storeys, connected by paper-like stairs with white surfaces and black undersides.

W-Window House by ALPHAville

“The sunlight shifts from east to west, the wind blows through from the first floor to the third floor and all the noise from outside, all the discontinuous context is transformed by simple architecture,” explain architects Kentaro Takeguchi and Asako Yamamoto.

W-Window House by ALPHAville

See more projects by Alphaville here, including a house with slanted walls and square peepholes.

W-Window House by ALPHAville

See more Japanese houses on Dezeen »

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Photography is by Kei Sugino.

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Here’s a few project details from the architects:


W-Window House

Use: residence
Site: Kyoto, Japan

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Site area: 47.6m2
Building area: 28.13m2
Total floor area: 72.42m2

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Building scale: 3 stories
Structure system: steel
Structural engineer: Kazuo Takeguchi (AOI Structural Engineering Office Co.Ltd)

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Isometric diagram

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Structural diagram

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Plans (1. Dining Room, 2. Storage, 3. Bathroom, 4. Living room, 5. Bedroom)

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Section (1. Dining Room, 2. Storage, 3. Bathroom, 4. Living room, 5. Bedroom)

W-Window House by ALPHAville

Elevation

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House Folded by ALPHAville

House Folded by Alphaville

Slanted walls pierced by square peepholes bisect this house in Osaka by architects ALPHAville.

House Folded by Alphaville

These sloping interior walls create a three storey-high prism, which separates first and second floor living rooms from a contorted staircase.

House Folded by Alphaville

The position of these angled walls creates triangular windows on the concrete exterior of the building, named House Folded, and a wonky ground-floor garage.

House Folded by Alphaville

The house has one bedroom located on the top floor, which leads out to a secluded roof terrace.

House Folded by Alphaville

This isn’t the first house with slanted walls by Japanese architects ALPHAville – see our earlier story about a residence divided by faceted timber panels.

House Folded by Alphaville

Photography is by Kai Nakamura.

House Folded by Alphaville

Here’s a more detailed description from ALPHAville:


House Folded

This is a 100m2 residence for a couple and their cats located in Osaka, Japan.

House Folded by Alphaville

The typical method for designing a house would assign rectangular rooms with specific functions and lay out them. Such a design produces a series of rooms of similar size and causes monotonous spatial experiences.

House Folded by Alphaville

Our approach was to avoid the conventional design practice and to create a structurally rational but spatially heterogeneous house.

House Folded by Alphaville

On the assumption that there is a human being within the optimal spatial coordinates resulted from the site and living requirements, we used Voronoi line segments that divide equally the shortest distance to create spaces.

House Folded by Alphaville

The actual trial and error involved the full use of 3D-CAD. First, the building’s shape was squashed in a parallelogram in order to keep an adequate distance from the site’s borders.

House Folded by Alphaville

Second, the center wall was folded to divide the space into two, diagonal to the site on the first floor and parallel to the site on the third floor. Next, the floors were skipped, and the final step was to slope the roof.

House Folded by Alphaville

In this way, various spaces came to be created so that continuous changes can be experienced as one moves along or through the bent wall.

House Folded by Alphaville

The slits on east elevation that run from first to third floor introduces direct light into the space reflecting the folded wall beautifully through the highly rational structure with minimum wall girders.

House Folded by Alphaville

At the same time, the slit on west elevation bring indirect light through the openings from behind the folded wall.

House Folded by Alphaville

Therefore while the space along the folded wall is an interior space filled with direct light, it also has an outdoor- space-like feeling facing folded walls with shining openings reflected by indirect light.

House Folded by Alphaville

We imagined a life in a building situated in a medium-density city where multiple buildings are connected via exterior in a loose relationship among man, building and nature, unlike in a city where each building is confined to each specific site.

House Folded by Alphaville

In that sense, although what we proposed here is a single family house, this design model is also applicable to larger buildings such as collective housings, offices, or multi-use complexes in a rational and versatile way.

House Folded by Alphaville

Information:

Use: residence
Site: Osaka, Japan
Site area: 75.93sqm
Building area: 40.00sqm
Total floor area: 102.03sqm

House Folded by Alphaville
Building scale: 3 storeys
Structure system: reinforced concrete construction
Structural engineer: Eisuke Mitsuda (Mitsuda Structural Consultants)


See also:

.

House in Kitakami by Nadamoto YukikoRoof on the Hill
by ALPHAville
New Kyoto Town House
by ALPHAville

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

Japanese architects ALPHAville have completed this terraced house in Takarazuka, Japan with a roof that follows the slope of the site.Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

The Roof on the Hill is designed within a three by three steel structural grid.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

The lowest level houses the kitchen and dining space, with family bedrooms and living spaces on the upper levels.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

The undulating roof has slit windows to admit light to each of the levels.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

More Japanese architecture stories on Dezeen »

The following is from the architects:


Roof on the Hill

This is a residential house located in a new development site in Takarazuka, Japan. Because of the solid nature of the ground, we decided to make a building only by putting a roof over the sloped terrain without modifying it.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

The house, spread on the terraced ground, has 3 meter by 3 meter grid steel frame. It consists of boxes, including a bedroom, a children’s room and a bathroom, and a residual space resulted from the subtraction of the boxes. On top of them is an undulating roof, whose slits allow sunlight to diffuse into the entire interior space.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

The interior space is affected by multiple parameters, or the interactions among them. Those parameters are concerned with direction and scale. As for direction, the interaction among the sloped ground, the grid of columns, and the inclined undulating roof of 45 degrees gives the interior a mixed character of order and variation.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

Furthermore, multiple scales have an influence on the space thus created. The three-meter interval of the grid, the 800mm difference in level of the floor, and the 300mm height of the roof aperture are combined to create both consistency and heterogeneity in the interior space.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

The relationships among different elements compose the simultaneously open and intimate space, like Italian mountain villages, like an interstitial space between buildings.

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

Project location: Takarazuka, Japan
Design time: May 2009-June 2010
Construction Time: June 2010-December 2010
Use: residence

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville

Building area: 99.87m2
Site area: 232.31m2
Structural system: steel structure

Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville


See also:

.

New Kyoto Town House by
ALPHAville
House in Hieidaira by
Tato Architects
House in Fukawa by
Suppose Design Office