House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

A wooden bridge and a glazed garden room connect the two halves of this house in Matsuyama, Japan, by architect Hayato Komatsu.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Located in the countryside, the two-storey House in Masaki has a white rectangular body with the enclosed garden at its centre and a sheltered terrace behind the facade at one end.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Stepping-stones allow residents to walk barefoot from the reception room to the living and dining area across the pebble-covered garden.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

A spiral staircase leads up to the bridge above, which connects the first floor bedrooms and bathroom.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Hayato Komatsu Architects also completed a timber-covered clinic earlier this year – see the story here.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

Here’s some more text about the project from Hayato Komatsu:


The housing, planned with couples and children in mind, is located a slight distance away from Matsuyama’s urban area in the quiet, sprawling countryside.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Compared to the countryside of the north, the south side has a lot of traffic volume due to roadside shop access, and a mixture of housing. Furthermore, each site has been converted from what was originally farmland into residential space.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The buyer’s desires are the same as they always have been – creating a lifestyle where one can live in a place comfortably located where one can feel a sense of nature and spending time with their families, while limiting dependence on facilities as much as possible.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

While the northern countryside is rich and beautiful, there is an element of uncertainty regarding the sustainability of this beauty.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Therefore it is believed the houses should not completely depend upon the scenery, but should themselves coexist with and nurture the scenery around them.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Because the wind in the area blows east and west throughout the year, yards are placed on the east and west sides of each site, which maintains the flow of air.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The arrangement is such that instead of closing off the north and south sides of the residence, the east and west sides are opened up, interposing the living room, where one spends long periods of time, in between the two yards.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The yard on the west side has a calm and cool feeling, surrounded by an outer wall which introduces gentle, indirect light. The yard on the east side features the warmth of a courtyard, with walls and ceilings surrounded by glass.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

As a result, both yards create gravity ventilation with their difference in temperatures, leading to pleasant air circulation throughout the interior of the home.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Moreover, the outdoor-like courtyard serves two roles. During the summer, movable joists and tent allow residents to control incoming sunlight, while in the winter, the courtyard can become a sunroom, gathering warmth from the sunlight to warm the interior air.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Furthermore, due to being surrounded by glass, the northern countryside is cropped, creating a new kind of scenery, much like a collage created from two landscapes. Add to that stairs and hallways, and you have a space where one can truly enjoy the scenery.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

In the future, we look forward to further nurturing the pleasant and diverse relationship between the surrounding scenery, and at the same time coordinating the peaceful and warm environments created by both yards.

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Location: Ehime,Japan
Use: Private house
Completion: November.2011
Structure: Wooden

House in Masaki by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Site Area: 494.98㎡
Total Floor Area: 122.58㎡
Architects: Hayato Komatsu Architects
Structural Engineers: Munehiro Minakawa/Nawaken gym

Obata Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Japanese architect Hayato Komatsu has completed the interiors for this clinic in Hiroshima, Japan, which is located within a shopping centre.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Due to the height of the original space, the architect has inserted a gabled ceiling to create a more intimate atmosphere and has left the walls of the treatment rooms slightly shorter, making a feature of the sloping ceiling.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The interior walls and ceiling are clad in strips of wood with an array of fluorescent tube lights on the sloping planes.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The clinic’s storefront façade provides passer-by’s with clear views into the clinic.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The treatment rooms are located at the rear of the space, carefully partitioned to prevent any direct views into them.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

More clinics and medical facilities on Dezeen »
More interiors on Dezeen »

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Here’s some more information from the architect:


[O-clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects]

This project is a plan for moving and reopening an internal clinic in a shopping mall on the outskirts of Hiroshima. The shopping mall has a high ceiling and, therefore, so does the clinic that occupies space within it.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

The clinic’s surrounding corridors are bustling with shoppers. The client requested to make good use of the high ceiling. However, keeping the open space increases the risk of heating/cooling and ventilation problems.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

So we inclined the ceiling to intonate the height, and we controlled the room space to adjust the volume of the room.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Furthermore, we made all the walls the same height and created space in between the walls and the ceiling like a partition style.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

This showed the ceiling as “a big roof” spanning all rooms and so giving the space depth, brightness and a comfortable feeling.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

In considering the privacy of people coming into the clinic, we managed, without closing the facade, to arrange each room to allow in light but yet in such a way to stop the direct view of outsiders.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

In total, it looks like a wooden Kura (a traditional Japanese storehouse), but we feel that this magnanimous space gives people repose and comfort.

O-Clinic by Hayato Komatsu Architects

Site: Hiroshima,JPN
Principal use: Clinic
Floor area: 174.58m²
Completion: Dec.2010


See also:

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GKK Dental Ambulatory by XarchitectenD.Vision Dental Clinic by A1ArchitectsBe Clinique by
Openlab Architects