Shigita House by Masato Sekiya

Shigita House by Masato Sekiya

Japanese architect Masato Sekiya has completed a house in Osaka with a sloping wall that looks like it’s toppling over.

The two-storey Shigita House is partly constructed from reinforced concrete and partly from wood.

A revolving door leads into the house, where sloping bookshelves lean against the angled wall of the ground floor living room.

One of the house’s four bedrooms is suspended above this room, but a gap between the walls allows natural light down from skylights above.

Both a staircase and a lift connect the two floors with an enclosed terrace on the roof.

Masato Sekiya, also known as Planet Creations, has designed a few buildings that we’ve featured on Dezeen – see all our stories about the architect here.

Photography is by Akira Kita.

Here’s some more information from Masato Sekiya:


Shigita House

It is located in Osaka Prefecture, in Higashi Osaka City

Concept: In a highly built-up area, closed in on all sides, this house offers both privacy and light.

Such a paradox is made possible by the structure’s ‘tunnels of light’.

Standing in the center of a densely populated area in East Osaka. The windows reach from the buffer zone through to the outside from the inner house.

Lighted up, the diagonally positioned outer wall seems emphasized. The inside is nearly invisible from outside. There are few windows, and the interior cannot be seen from outside. The wall on the right side of the car park area is unfinished RC. The vertical portion of the construction is made of painted inflammable wooden material. The white surface is spray painted. The entrance door revolves on a vertical central axis.

The living room is toplit as natural light enters between the diagonal outside wall and the inside vertical surface. The shelves in the living room were designed to follow the diagonal of the wall.

The second floor bedroom floats to allow an influx of light from above to penetrate to the living/dining room below.

Between the north wall and the inner chamber is a passage for movement to the bathroom facilities. The toplight makes this a bright and comfortable space.

The tatami room is designed contrastingly in black and silver.


See also:

.

House for Three Children
by Masato Sekiya
Lifted House
by Masato Sekiya
Complex House
by Tomohiro Hata

A Mono Struct Office by Masato Sekiya

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Japanese architect Masato Sekiya has slotted one timber structure inside another to construct a law firm in Nara.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

The building is named Mono Struct Office, as it was built using cyprus planks of a single standard size.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Individual planks clad parts of the exterior, while groups of two or three are bolted together to provide a structural frame.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Plaster covers the walls of the outer shell, which houses office workstations.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

The exposed timber inner structure is set at an opposing angle and encloses a kitchen, a storage room and a conference room.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Horizontal slit windows puncturing the walls of this room provide glimpsed views out to the adjacent road.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

A few projects by Masato Sekiya have been featured on Dezeen, including another building held together by bolts – see that story here, and see all of the stories about Sekiya here.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Photography is by Akira Kita.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Here’s some more information from Sekiya:


A Mono Struct Office

Planet Creations original concept of monostruct uses a single size of wood plank for all of the wooden construction — doubling or tripling for strength, and bolting joints with metal parts.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

This office for a legal scrivener is made of two monostructures combined, clasping one into the other.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Click above for larger image

One is a box-like structure of horizontal mono-structs, shortened here and there to form an irregular mozaic of space.

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

The outside monostructure is regularly spaced for simplicity.

Click above for larger image

Monostruct Office by Masato Sekiya

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Hair Very
by Maker
Wood Block House by Tadashi
Yoshimura Architects
Tree House by Mount Fuji Architects Studio