House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto Architect & Associates

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Japanese firm Kazunori Fujimoto Architect & Associates have completed a concrete house in Fukuoka that resembles a half-submerged submarine.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

House in Ropponmatsu has an L-shaped profile, with the first and second storeys set back so as not to overshadow neighbouring properties.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Outward-facing windows were rejected on the ground floor of the bunker-like house in favour of glazed walls that overlook two enclosed courtyards.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Instead, the only outwardly visible windows are placed at the top of the three-storey turret, which resembles a conning tower.

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House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

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House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Photography is by Kazunori Fujimoto.

Here are some more details from the architect:


House in Ropponmatsu

This house is located in the city area near by the center of Fukuoka city. The shape of the site is long and narrow, 6m x 18m.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

We designed this house not to make the shade on the north house next door, as a result, the house with three floors shaped like ”L”.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

In contrast to closed outside like a silent sculptural volume, the interior is designed well-lighted and well-opened.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

At the ground floor level, we can look whole the long distance of the site through from entrance court to bedroom.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Each room is filled with light and breeze from the two courts.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

The storage and bathroom are placed in the second floor, and another bedroom is in the third floor.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

At third floor level, keeping a distance from the road, we can get wide range of view, from near the garden tree in the next door, to the faraway mountains.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

The simple form, found by the condition of the site, has been transformed into an affluent space for living.

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Location: Fukuoka, Japan
Main use: house

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

Site area: 121m2
Building area: 71.99m2
Total floor area: 99.16m2
Design term: 2010
Construction term: 2011

House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

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House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

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House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

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House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

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House in Ropponmatsu by Kazunori Fujimoto

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See also:

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Safe House by Robert
Konieczny
Himeji Observatory House
by KINO architects
Hiedaira House by Thomas
Daniell Studio

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka, POI, Nawakenjimu and Lapin

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

Japanese architects Akinari TanakaPOI, Nawakenjimu and Lapin have completed this diamond-shaped house in Kokura, Japan, with a ledge in one corner for climbing up to the roof terrace.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

The Kokura Tanaka House is split into quarters by two crossing walls in the centre, creating four equal rooms that each have access to outdoor terraces.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

The small plot is surrounded by the perimeter walls of neighbouring residences, which are now painted in the same shade as the new house to make it feel less hemmed-in.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

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Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

Photography is by Kei Sugimoto.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

More information is provided by the architects below:


Kokura Tanaka House

This is the project that the client returned to the birthplace after the retirement and rebuilt an old house. He requested sunny one-storied house with good ventilation.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

But there was a problem that an erstwhile quiet green residential area was changed into densely built-up area, and moreover neighbour’s concrete block wall surrounded his flagpole shape site. And there was a sense of being oppressed.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

So we tried the design “Shakuhei”(=Borrowed wall) to turn this bad condition to the advantage. Incorporating beautiful landscape is usual method at “Shakkei”, but this project “Shakuhei” is a trial to incorporating neighbour’s ordinary concrete block wall. Therefore, we dared to make the house with a concrete block wall.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

Firstly, we cut this site into pieces on a cross with concrete block wall. Secondly, we put one roof over the top of the wall. As a result, in all rooms we obtained scenery that our wall and neighbour’s wall are seen at the same time.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

In a word, it is felt that neighbours’ walls are own walls. And we feel this house compact but large, because each rooms have a garden.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

Further, we got a sense of unity and a reflection effect by painting neighbour’s wall white with their consent. However, we want not only to borrow the wall from neighbours but also to build the relation of win-win. So that, we secured the neighbor’s sunny space with good breeze by making the flat roof terrace and painting it white.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

[structure and air conditioning] Fill-up concrete block structure (=for retaining walls) makes it possible to secure horizontal force by even if it is a straight joint. We planned efficient air conditioning in consideration of loop space. The air-conditioner blows air into air loop duct after taking return air from the center of the house.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

The air inlets are familiar screen blocks in a Japanese town. And the air outlets are simple holes but manual regulation of air volume is possible.

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

Architects: Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin
Location: Kokura,Japan
Project area: 67 sqm
Site area: 247 sqm
Project year: 2009-2010

Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

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Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

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Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari Tanaka+POI+Nawakenjimu+Lapin

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See also:

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Belly House by
Tomohiro Hata
New Kyoto Town House
by ALPHAville
Nest by
UID

Wood Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Behind a glass facade, a basket weave of timber encases the living and dining areas of this house in Nara, Japan by Japanese studio Tadashi Yoshimura Architects.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

The lattice wall can be used as a climbing frame for the client’s children, but also serves as a partial screen that light may pass through.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Named Wood Block House, the rectilinear building is raised up from the ground by stone walls.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

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Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Photography is by Hitoshi Kawamoto.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

The following details are from the architects:


Wood Block House

The house is designed for an elderly married couple, and their grand children that occasionally stay with them.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

The site is located in a housing district developed 30 years ago that kept the natural land form. Around the site, we can see beautiful retaining wall made of granite. I try to extend the exterior topography to the interior of the building.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

If day light diminishes, the shape of the structural shear wall that creates a relationship to the site’s stone wall, is projected onto the glass façade.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Similar to retaining stone walls, this wall is best play equipment that kids enjoy to clime, pass under the hole , sit, and see distant scenery.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

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A Structural Shear Wall System of Wooden Blocks

This structural shear wall consists of ship-shaped wooden blocks. These blocks can be easily stacked without the help of skilled workers, and can be disassembled and assembled in different location if necessary.

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

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Architects: Tadashi Yoshimura Architects
Location: Nara, Japan
Structural Engineers: Masahiro Inayama
General Contractor: Nakayama Komuten

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

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Site area: 265 sq m
Building area: 86 sq m
Total floor area: 148 sq m

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

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Structure: wood; 2story
Principal use: residence, atelier
Project Year: 2008
Photographs: Hitoshi Kawamoto

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

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Materials
External wall: glass, Cement board
Inner wall: Japan cedar, LVL, Lauan plywood


See also:

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Niseko Look Out Cafe
by Design Spirits
Tang Palace
by FCJZ
Ninetree Village by
David Chipperfield

The Cat House by Key Operation

The Cat House by KOP

This Tokyo house by Japanese architects Key Operation has been designed around the movements of the client’s pet cat, writes Yuki Sumner.

The Cat House by KOP

Stepping-stone shelves allow a cat to move between rooms in The Cat House through high level openings, without using the landing and stairs.

The Cat House by KOP

With integrated book shelves, the landing doubles up as a library and study.

The Cat House by Key Operation

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

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The Cat House by KOP

Photography is by Key Operation, apart from where otherwise stated.

The Cat House by Key Operation

The following is from the architects:


Neko no Ie (The Cat House)

A century ago, the famous Japanese novelist Sosuke Natsume wrote a novel called “I Am a Cat (Wagahai Wa Neko De Aru).” It is written from the point of view of a cat.

The Cat House by KOP

The cat, who remains nameless during the novel’s first chapter, lives in a house with a teacher and his family. He is angry that he is not regarded as an equal member of the family in this household. “I will never catch mice,” the cat announces haughtily, not wishing to make himself useful.

The Cat House by KOP

What if, however, there was a house, which has been designed specifically with a cat in mind? What would it look like? The Japanese architect Akira Koyama of Key Operation Inc. has recently designed a house for a young family, which included a pet cat, in the densely populated Taishido district, west of Tokyo. Undoubtedly, this house would have made Natsume’s cat green with envy.

The Cat House by KOP

Neko no Ie (The Cat House) stands on a typically compact, rectilinear site (7 meters wide, 12 meters deep) along a narrow residential street, just big enough for a single car to pass through.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

Although the plot is small, the client (including the cat) did not specify the need for an outdoor garden space, and so the architect decided to set the house back by 3 meters from the street, thereby creating a void, synonymous in Japan with a sense of luxury.

The Cat House by KOP

The upper section of the house is further set back from the ground level, generating a balcony. It is generally perceived that the Japanese architects have a greater freedom of expression than the Western counterparts but we forget that there are a number of restrictions that the Japanese architects face when designing buildings in Japan, and this is no exception.

The Cat House by KOP

There is a law, for example, restricting the owning of a car to those who can ensure its parking space. Neko no Ie, like many houses on the street, accommodates a garage within the house.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

The architect faced yet another restriction imposed in this area. It forbade the use of bright colours on exterior facades so that the ‘scenery’ of the area is conserved. Neko no Ie’s grey stucco façade complies with this regulation.

The Cat House by KOP

Undeterred, however, Koyama subtly managed to subvert both of these restrictions by painting the inside of the garage bright pink, therefore making a feature out of what is usually a dark and dingy space and injecting much-needed playfulness in this otherwise boring grey neighbourhood.

The Cat House by KOP

The house’s asymmetrical roofline maximizes both its playfulness as well as its volume. The architect has created within a complex interior space consisting of rooms of varying sizes, which are stack on top of each other over three floors.

The Cat House by KOP

One would not be able to observe such a structure from outside of the house, but it reflects the layout of the area, which has a mixture of detached houses, both large and small.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

The biggest room in the house is the dining/living room, stretched horizontally to fit the whole width of the house. By also extending the room vertically, the architect has opened up this room to the rest of the house.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

What look like shelves jutting out of one wall of this room are actually steppingstones for the pet cat to enter into the adjacent rooms through the openings placed higher up on the wall.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

This arrangement leaves the ample staircase and landings, which double up as a library, undisturbed from the burst of activities of the feline member of the family, while the rest of the family uses them as a place of quietude.

The Cat House by KOP

Moreover, just as the garage became the visual focal point for the exterior of the house, the staircase, painted also brightly pink, signals a gathering of all the separate interior sections of Neko no Ie.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

By varying the sizes of the rooms and painting them in different colours, the architect has emphasized their uniqueness and separateness.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

At the same time, he has managed to link the rooms through small and large openings so that none of the rooms is completely isolated. Autonomy is respected but isolation is discouraged.

The Cat House by KOP

For instance, a large opening in the wall of the dining/living room, which looks into the kitchen, allows the person who is cooking to connect with the person who is being served.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

In the meantime, the cat can slip into the study located above the kitchen through yet another, this time smaller, opening.

The Cat House by KOP

The rooms’ co-dependence is thus implicitly emphasized.

The Cat House by KOP

Neko no Ie is a symbolic celebration of the emergence of the modern Japanese family, more democratic than the traditional one preceding it, allowing each member to flourish independently while nurturing a supportive environment.

The Cat House by KOP

Ironically, a pet cat was an integral part of it.

Text by Yuki Sumner, 2011


See also:

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Yachiyo
by Atelier Tekuto
House by Yoshio Oono
Architect & Associates
House in Fukuyama
by Suppose Design Office

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Yachiyo by Atelier TEKUTO

Japanese architects Atelier Tekuto have created a house in Hayama, Japan, by wrapping two 100 year-old wooden warehouses in a new faceted skin.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Glazed doors at one corner slide back to join the open-plan interior to a terrace, exposing one wooden column of the original structure.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

New wooden furring strips and composite boards are laid over the old beams and supports of the two warehouses, which can still be seen inside.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Flooring removed from the lower storey of The Yachiyo house was re-used upstairs, while the ground floor is now covered in reclaimed bricks.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

The house also contains a temporary shop.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

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The following is from the architects:


YACHIYO

Although Atelier Tekuto’s «Relocation» project has been underway since 2007, Yachiyo is the first «Re-location» building completed in Japan. The building is situated 100 meters from the ocean in Hayama, Kanagawa prefecture. This is used as a secondary residence and temporary shop.

Yachiyo by Atelier TEKUTO

PURPOSE

To make 100 year old materials last for another 100 years. To fuse old and new material, juxtaposing the regional and cultural differences in a parallel arrangement.

Yachiyo by Atelier TEKUTO

We treat sunlight as a material. A material that can be captured only for an instant. It has the ability to fuse the juxtaposing elements or emphasize their differences. It exists both within and outside the human concept of time.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Sunlight turns the interior space inside out. It highlights the dramatic structure as it permeates the building, accentuating the marriage between traditional and contemporary values. At night, custom handmade light fixtures let Yachiyo float into sight like a constellation fireflies.

Yachiyo – Japanese word meaning «a long time».

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

RELOCATION

Two abandoned warehouses built 100 and 120 years ago were chosen. In order to reinforce the structure, the two warehouses were wrapped with furring strips that also function as thin columns. Enhanced high-pressure wood wool cement boards which act as insulation were attached. This provided structural reinforcement, humidity control and thermal insulation all in one system.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

The wrapping material was reduced to a thickness of 95mm in order to provide more interior space. Also, the preexisting material was treated in order to prevent infestation and provide resistance against the salty environment. The first floor is composed of eighty year old bricks made in Shanghai. The material of the previous first floor was then refinished and applied to the 2nd floor. In effect, disused materials were transported from distant locations and given new life.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Re-configuring Values

“Re-configuring Values” is a concept that will permeate the 21st Century. The following concepts are essential to this discussion:

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Ecology: the conservation of the global environment – the most significant theme for this century – ought to be examined from a new standpoint, through new developments and re-configurations.

Cross-Culture: adopting specific local and regional characteristics in order to achieve not just simple integration between different architectural styles and cultures, but to create culture on an entirely new dimension.

Reconsideration of Time: a re-examination of the past in order to predict the future. An increased awareness of time as a phenomenon that can preserve local and regional differences in material and character.

It is essential to achieve a greater understanding of when to preserve, when to eliminate or when to maintain.

Yachiyo by Atelier Tekuto

Based on these three approaches, we are working to “re-configure values” by recycling, reducing and relocating Japan’s traditional Minka houses in order to give them new life.


See also:

.

Slit House
by EASTERN Design Office
Tohma House
by Hiroshi Horio Architects
House by Yoshio Oono
Architect & Associates

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

This farmhouse in Hokkaido by Japanese studio Hiroshi Horio Architects has a pointed observation deck where residents dry herbs.

Tohma-House-by-Hiroshi-Horio-Architects

In a rural location surrounded by arable fields, Tohma House has a large kitchen, living area and basement where various crops are prepared and stored during harvest seasons.

Tohma-House-by-Hiroshi-Horio-Architects

Rooms are divided across split-levels, connected to one another by both ladders and stairs.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The cast-concrete and timber structure of the house is left exposed on the interior, with a wood-burning stove located in one corner.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

More Japanese Houses on Dezeen »

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The following information is from the architects:


Tohma House

There exists the family life running harmoniously along the time of nature.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

Dreamt of creating a new home for the family where their lives would nestle deep in nature, step by step we weave precious matters into our design.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

Living in harmony with nature

The site is located on the rural outskirts of Tohma, Hokkaido.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The father works as a mountain guide, the mother paints with watercolors, and the son attends primary school and they live, work and farm together.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The family had been renting the farm house left behind by the farmer’s retirement.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

However they welcomed the opportunity of having the grandmother, who had been living by herself, to start designing their new house.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

After living in the area for some time, the family was longing to have a firewood stove could run through the night.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

They normally have to get up in the middle of the night to add more firewood in order to beat the early morning cold.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

This experience has taught them that fire wood is one of the most economical heat resources, regardless of the effort it takes to keep the stove running.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The lowest temperature during the midwinter in Tohma could go as low as minus 25 degrees Celsius, which reiterates the fundamental functions of houses to provide a well-insulated enclosure for families.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

Family life revolves around the changing seasons.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

At the end of winter, seedlings are planted.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The land is cultivated with the melting of the snow and various crops are nurtured until they are ready to be harvested in the fall.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The harvested crops are used for family meals, and they are also processed to be made into snacks or preserved food, to be sold as part of their family business.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

We were very moved by the way the family coexisted with nature’s severity, when we first heard the story about their everyday life throughout the year, probably because we felt their life is running along the course of nature, spontaneously.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

Space Composition

Through the large window in the lower level hall furnished with the firewood stove, you can enjoy the scenic view over rice fields and the Daisetsuzan Volcanic Group.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The interior spaces are filled with the natural light filtering through the FRP grating observation deck of the loft where the family dry herbs.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

In plan, the central open living space, the kitchen and the basement storage are laid out in a functional manner to manage plentiful harvests.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The tower like composition of such spaces forms multiple layers one on top of the other as if the natural light from the top was its core.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

The interior space with these continuous layers has the atmosphere of a barn attic.

Tohma-House-by-Hiroshi-Horio-Architects

Each individual can have their personal space, and still feel intimate with each other.

Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

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Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

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Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

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Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

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Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

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Tohma House by Hiroshi Horio Architects

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Tohma-House-by-Hiroshi-Horio-Architects

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Tohma-House-by-Hiroshi-Horio-Architects

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Tohma-House-by-Hiroshi-Horio-Architects

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See also:

.

House by Kazunori Fujimoto
Architect & Associates
Tsumuji+Hako
by UID Architects
House by Yutaka Yoshida
Architect & Associates

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects and Ohno Japan

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

This holiday home in Kanagawa, Japan, by Japanese studios Nakae Architects and Ohno Japan comprises two separate blocks fanning outwards towards Tokyo Bay.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

Named Minami-Hayama duo, the two buildings are composed of thirteen vertical walls spreading over the triangular site with glass infills between them.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

Internally the floors are arranged around split levels connected by spiral staircases.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

Located on a steep hill, the upper floors have views towards Mount Fuji.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

Photography is by Hiroyasu Sakaguchi.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


Minami-Hayama duo

Walking up the steep slope that branches off from the seaside highway, you experience a spectacular sequence of surrounding scenery. The landscape has intricate layers of hills and valleys, with trees and houses scattered along the undulating surfaces. And as you go up, a stunning panorama of the Bay of Sagami gradually unfolds in front of you, with a fine view of Mt. Fuji and the Izu Peninsula in distance.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

We designed a weekend house, which consists of two separate blocks, located near the top of the landscape. The site is an uneven fan-shaped land situated between two roads at the Y-shaped intersection. The site had to be divided in two for each blocks. The divided sites varied in size, shape and orientation, but our intention was to provide the same volumes, equal living condition, and the best views for the both of them.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

The two blocks both consist of thirteen 10-meter-high walls with various widths. Each walls stand separately, and glass is inserted in between. Walls are set irregularly, so you will experience a dramatic sequence of different framings of the surrounding view as you move among them. The second floor, which is divided by stairs in the middle, has split-levels, so you can enjoy views at different eye levels.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

As you move along this ever-changing scenery framed by irregular walls, you begin to feel that the walls themselves become parts of the surrounding view. Our intention is to bring the spectacle of the surrounding scenery into the space. The walls open to the sea and the mountains, and are closed against the adjacent block and the neighbor. However our intention was to in create a dramatic and intricate space, which is not just about “open and close” relationship.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

In this project big challenge was to design two separate blocks in a rather small fan-shaped site divided in two sections. However by boldly opening up the space towards the surrounding scenery, you feel as if Mt. Fuji has become a part of your site. We successfully created a dramatic openness that one cannot experience in everyday life in the city.

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

Location: Yokosuka, Kanagawa, Japan
Principal use: 2 weekend houses
Architects: Yuji Nakae / Nakae Architects, Hirofumi Ohno / Ohno Japan

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects

Site Area: A-98.88m2, B-107.29m2
Building Area: A-49.15m2, B-49.77m2
Total Floor Area: A-101.18m2, B-101.67m2
Structure: Reinforced Concrete, 3 stories

Minami-Hayama duo by Nakae Architects


See also:

.

Edge by
Apollo Architects & Associates
N House
by TOFU
House by FORM/
Kouichi Kimura Architects

AMA House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Every room of this house in Japan by local architects Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates is contained in a separate block, connected by sliding doors.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

This allows the rooms of Small House to each have unique proportions suited to their interior functions, as well as different material finishes.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

The clustered arrangement of blocks creates two defined courtyards that form a garden and a parking area.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Photography is by Toshiyuki Yano.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Here are some more details from the architects:


Small House

As the site is surrounded by rice fields, we planned “a small house” that the idyllic atmosphere and landscape.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

The entire volume of the house was first divided into individual rooms, their each concept were finally linked together taking account of factors such as connection of garden and room, entrance of light, ventilation, flow line of daily activities, etc.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Also, to meet with the demand for a guest parking lot and family garden, we laid out the rooms across the site to secure two exterior spaces.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Multiple Viewpoint

Each room has different volume, finish, and openings.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

These differences were made to enhance deeper experience with elements by presenting more than one viewpoint on each element; for example, when the light enters from wide opening, it gives you different impression from the thin ray of light in a dark place.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

These elements can be trees in the garden, wind, internal openness, nuance of shadows, and communications between family members.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Connected Air

When opening the door, these rooms become “One single room with connections”.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Although, unlike a general single room, it can not get a view of whole room, one room is visually connected with some and also connected with others beyond by air.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Communication is prompted among the viewable rooms by the strong connection of visual element, and with the rooms out of sight by the senses other than visual sense.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Subsequently, the light and wind streaming into a room, as well as the act and the sign of the family there are transmitted to the adjacent rooms, and are extended beyond.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Supplementary Architecture

The rooms expanded in the site functions as a house without being isolated functionally and spatially.  The important thing is that the rooms are connected.  The “connection” is formed by the persons and nature, and is not limited within the structure and the diagram of architecture.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

I think that the architecture is something that acts as a supplement of the “connected air “.

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

Project detail informations

Project data

Location: Aichi, Japan
Site Area: 464.0m2
Built Area: 85.92m2
Total Floor Area: 85.92m2
Type of Construction: Wooden
Exterior Materials: Metal finish
Interior Materials: Lauan board 、paint finish
Year of completion: April, 2011
Design team: Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates
Structure company  /  g2plan
Construction company / Sunshow industries ltd

Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

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Small House by Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates

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See also:

.

Ogaki House
by Katsutoshi Sasaki
Tsumuji+Hako
by UID Architects
House in Buzen
by Suppose Design Office

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

The roof of this house in Hashimoto, Japan, by designers Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates folds around to become an exterior canopy with triangular reveals.

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

Behind the shade of the orange canopy, the glazed facade of House of Wakayama has sliding doors that open to expose the interior spaces to the elements.

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

On the first floor an open plan room projects out across the building entrance to meet the canopy.

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

More residential architecture on Dezeen »

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

The following project details are from the architect, as well as some text in Japanese:


Family House

location: wakayama
site area: 175.19 sqm
total area: 93.34 sqm

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

design development: 2009.4-2010.8
construction: 2010.8-2010.12

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

structure: wooden
structure engineer: HN

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

max. height: 6.04m
stories: 2

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

和歌山県橋本市の閑静な住宅地に建つ、夫婦とその子供達の専用住宅の計画である。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

廻りには低層の住宅が立ち並び穏やかな風景が広がり、大きな空がよりいっそういっそう大きく感じられ、比較的身近に自然を感じられる敷地であった。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

自然を出来るだけ生活空間へ取り込む事が設計の与条件として感じ取る事が出来た。

『内部と外部の境界線をあいまいとする。』

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

外の要素と内の要素を近ずける為に、建物で大きな軒下の日陰を作り、生活空間として最小限のエリアを建具で囲う事により

建具の開閉により内部と外部の境界線をあいまいにする事を考えた。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

また、内部と外部の境界線をよりいっそう無くすよう、1階への柱をもうけないように、屋根から2階の床を細いスチールの柱により

吊り上げている。その柱は2階の空間へリズムを与える役割として存在している。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

外壁においては、大きな風景として存在している、空の色と補色関係のオレンジ色とした。

補色の色関係による、相乗効果を狙ったものである。

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates

House of Wakayama by Yoshio Oono Architect & Associates


See also:

.

House by
Hidehiro Fukuda Architects
Ogaki House
by Katsutoshi Sasaki
House in Fukawa
by Suppose Design Office

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

This house in Fukuyama, completed by Japanese studio UID Architects, is composed of four separate blocks clad in black-stained cedar.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

Square openings in the exterior walls of the Tsumuji+Hako house reveal covered walkways that connect each of the buildings, which include one single-storey house, one two-storey house, and two garage blocks.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

The theme of square openings is repeated in the windows to the two individual residences, where two generations of one family reside.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Project Description

This is a two-family house for the couple and their parents.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

It is not a normal form to contain two families in one building but composed by the four boxes of two houses and each garages in the large site of about 500㎡.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

The tsumuji (the crossroad) composed of placement of these four boxes become the approach to the site and the line of flow to the terrace, and it is intended that a new connection of the community is created by the space like the alley.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

About part of houses, one-story and two-story house are about 100㎡.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

It is the form that the parents’ one-story house (type A) has the double structure that established the hollow atmospheric layer in the garret, and considered the thermal environment of the interior space.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

On the other hand, the two-story house (type B) has one-room living space through a large rectangular void in upper part of it.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

At the tsumuji (the crossroad), the scenery which community spreads by meeting and talking is the daily scenery of the town at the crossroad where this site located in.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

This project is the suggestion to live while opening for a city and keeping a sense of distance of each other’s private lives by the two-family house of the separate type.

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

Name project: tsumuji+hako
Architects: UID architects – Keisuke Maeda, Toru Shigehiro, Hiromi Ishiguro
Consultants: K-style – Kouso Katayama, mechanical; Toshiya Ogino Environment Design Office – Toshiya Ogino, Yasunori Aoki, landscape
General contractor: Home Co., Ltd.-Akihiro Hosoya, Masaki Sakamoto
Structural system: Timber structure
Used materials: Cedar, exterior; diatomite, wallpaper, plaster board, interior

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects

Site area: typeA: 288.38㎡, type B: 266.76㎡
Built area: typeA: total 127.62㎡ / house area 91.62㎡ garage area 36.00㎡, typeB: total 111.03㎡ / house area 64.83㎡ garage area 46.20㎡
Total floor area : typeA: total 116.82㎡ / house area 80.82㎡ garage area 36.00㎡, typeB: total 154.50㎡ / house area 108.30㎡ garage area 46.20㎡
Date of completion: November, 2010

Tsumuji+Hako by UID Architects


See also:

.

Nest by
UID Architects
House by Johannes
Norlander Arkitektur
House 1 and House 2
by TAKA