Keyhole House by EASTERN Design Office

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

Japanese architects EASTERN Design Office tend to design houses with unconventional windows. Here’s their latest one in Kyoto.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

The L-shaped glazing that punctures the facade of the residence creates an illuminated frame around the entrance.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

Sumi ink stains the rendered exterior of the house, creating a dark outline around the front elevation.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

This ink colours the entire exposed side wall, which features a series of square windows at staggered heights.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

Aspects of the building are highlighted in red and pink, including the front door and a thin exterior canopy.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

A ledge below the first floor ceiling inside makes a perfect route for the client’s cats.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

Other houses on Dezeen by EASTERN Design Office feature windows that are circular, slit-shaped and jaggedsee all the projects here.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

We’ve also featured another house that includes dedicated routes for the family cats – see it here.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

Photography is by Koichi Torimura.

Here’s a description of the house from the architects:


Keyhole House

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

EASTERN design office

The facade of this house has the shape of a keyhole.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office
A key to open “my house”, which is standing along a narrow street of a crowded town, is designed as a key itself on the façade of this house. A house can be called a key, which will open up your life happily. Such a small key, this house is a key!

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

The site is in Kyoto, Japan. It is a small house for four people and two cats. It has only 100 square meters of floor space. It is standing alone in the corner of a small parking lot like a table left behind at the seaside.

  • The façade is marked by a window shaped like a key.
  • Mortar with sumi ink is applied to the exterior wall.
  • Simple color coding. Red and purple are used as an accent.
  • The triangle roof.
  • Random arrangement of small windows.
  • The edge to make the shape of this house clearer.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

There is a thin steel eave which is fixed to the façade of this house as if it is floating, and a key-shaped slit like a “picture”, crossing over the eave. A red wine-colored door. These are laid out like a beautiful pattern designed on a jewel box.

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

You sometimes will see a cat lying by the window at this house. You wonder what she is watching. Do you still have a naïve heart with a key to open this house?

Keyhole House by Eastern Design Office

Data: Keyhole House
Location: Kyoto, Japan
Architect: EASTERN design office
Site Area: 90.81㎡
Total Floor Area: 103.47㎡
Structural Engineering: EASTERN design office
Contractor: arcc


See also:

.

House
by EASTERN
Slit House by
EASTERN
House Awaiting Death
by EASTERN

Sayonara

Eric Bates a pensé et conçu une courte vidéo d’animation “Sayonara” colorée et visuellement rafraîchissante. Relatant la dernière journée d’un jeune homme avec son amie tortue de mer, il a réalisé cette création pour la fin de ses études à l’Université d’Art et de Design de Kyoto.



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Previously on Fubiz

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Manga Plates

Mika Tsutai a pensé ce projet “Manga Plates” pour la fin de ses études à l’université de Kyoto. Chaque planche de la collection permet d’accueillir un aliment : une sorte de matérialisation en réel d’une case de planche de mangas. Une conception intéressante à découvrir dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

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Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

Architect Keiichi Hayashi of Japan has converted this traditional timber townhouse in central Kyoto into a cosmetics store.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

The renovation retained the original planning of the traditional “machiya” building, with the addition of structural steel frames to the ground floor.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

The ground floor houses the cosmetics shop and a courtyard, with an office and gallery on the first floor.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

More stories from Japan on Dezeen »
More interior stories on Dezeen »

Photographs are by Yoshiyuki Hirai.

The following is from the architect:


Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi Architect

Kyoto, Japan

Kyoto Silk, a beauty cosmetic shop, is located in the centre of Kyoto, which is a famous cultural city in Japan. The project was to convert a ‘Machiya’, a Japanese traditional wooden townhouse, into a small shop. The building was required to be reinforced because the original building was deteriorating rapidly and it did not have the enough strength to meet the safety standards. Therefore, on the ground floor of the two stories, thin steel frames were fixed on the inside of the original wooden frames. And on the first floor, a plywood structure was used on the floor to keep the horizontal rigidity.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

A typical ‘Machiya’ consists of ‘Mise’ ‘Niwa’ ‘To-ri Niwa’. ‘Mise’ means the life space in the room, ‘Niwa’ means the small courtyard, and ‘To-ri Niwa’ means the workspace and the passage of the half-outside air-well void. During repeated study and considering the ventilation, lighting, movement, privacy, approach to the street, and taking in the nature, it became clear that the constitution of ‘Machiya’ was most suitable for the new program as a building in a narrow space in the centre of the city.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

As a result, in this project, I focused on the way that function as a beauty cosmetic shop could be complimented by the space limitations of this ‘Machiya’.
What is most important for this plan of a sales place is to make the products clear for the customers. (not simply as beauty display, but making it clear to the customer exactly what the product is.) A homogeneous, hard optical environment and simple shelves were considered so that the products never look exaggerated.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

The courtyard is placed at the back of the sales space and is the space for the guests and the staff to take a rest. At the same time, it is the space to take in the small nature of the store. The space is able to be accessed directly through from the street. These relations are exactly the same as the original ‘Machiya’. The first floor of this building is used as an office and gallery.

Kyoto Silk by Keiichi Hayashi

Project Information:
Project name: Kyoto Silk
Location: Kyoto, Japan
Architect: Keiichi Hayashi

Design Period: February, 2009〜 April, 2009
Construction Period: May, 2009〜 June, 2009
Function: shop
Site Area: 52.38㎡
Building Area: 37.33㎡
Total Floor Areas: 67.58㎡
Stories: 2 stories
Structure: wooden frame (original)
Structure Engineer: Satoru Shimoyama / Shimoyama structure Office


See also:

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NE by
Teruhiro Yanagihara
KIZUKI + LIM by
Teruhiro Yanagihara
AZB by
Geneto