House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara and Assistant Studio

Three separate sections built in different cities make up this steel-framed house in Nara, Japan, by Tokyo architects Megumi Matsubara and Hiroi Ariyama (+ slideshow).

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Megumi Matsubara worked alongside Hiroi Ariyama of Assistant Studio to design House of 33 Years, which is made from a mixture of exposed raw materials including steel, timber, concrete, steel cables, clear corrugated plastic and glass panels.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Located next door to an ancient Buddhist temple, the house was designed for an elderly couple who decided to move house after 33 years living in their original home together.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Each part of the house was simultaneously built in three separate locations – the cities of Nara, Sendai, and Aomori – before being transported to the site and put together as one unit, which the architects felt would create an architecture that “moves”.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

The roof shell was built in Nara, while the main rooms were built in Aomori from local timber. Meanwhile, a section of the first-floor was built at the Sendai School of Design and housed a farm in the school’s courtyard, before being transferred to Nara.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Architect Megumi Matsubara said the house’s location has a special meaning for the couple. “The husband is originally from Nara and had an attachment and melancholic nostalgia with the temple, having spent a considerable amount of his childhood there,” Matsubara said.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

A layered arrangement of glass panes and wooden structures through the interior create different visual perspectives depending on where you stand inside the building.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

“By framing views across different areas, images are continuously produced by the inhabitants’ movement,” Matsubara said. “Every image is given its own space of possibility, then overlaps as multiple additions to the home to update the family’s memories.”

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Accessed by steel staircases and a wooden ladder elevated at different heights, the first-floor bathroom is cantilevered and offers residents a view of the temple’s bamboo forest while bathing.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

This floor is the brightest part of the house, while the smaller, darker room on the ground-floor level is used as a bedroom. The combined living, dining and kitchen space is positioned at the back.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Another project we’ve featured by Megumi Matsubara is an installation in Tokyo featuring 10 conceptual machines all beginning with the letter ‘B’.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Other recently completed houses in Japan include a narrow timber house in Tokyo and a residence with angular cutaways create through the walls, floors and ceilings. See more houses in Japan »

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

Photography is Tadasu Yamamoto, Shinkenchiku-sha.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


House of 33 Years

Megumi Matsubara & Hiroi Ariyama of the architecture firm Assistant are pleased to announce the completion of House of 33 Years after five years since the project’s inception. The House of 33 Years is a residence located next to the world heritage Todaiji Temple in Nara, Japan. The house was designed for an elderly couple who decided to move to a new house thirty three years after living in their first house.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

The House of 33 Years is a house for a collector who collects memories, whose memory and future exist simultaneously in the same space. By framing views across different areas, images are continuously produced by the inhabitants’ movement. Every image is given its own space of possibility, then overlaps as multiple additions to the home to update the family’s memories.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara

In 2012, during the construction process, the fabrication of the house was partly supported by Aomori Contemporary Art Centre and Sendai School of Design. Its design/fabrication process has been an academic research subject of Adaptable Futures, Loughborough University, UK. The house has been awarded SD Review prize in 2010.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara
Axonometric diagram – click for larger image

The house consists of multiple pavilions and rooms in wood structure that stand under the big steel-frame house. The relationship between the individual elements defines the character of the house as a whole. Its construction process has been pursued in three separate locations simultaneously; Nara, Sendai, and Aomori. In Nara, the exterior steel roof to cover the whole residence has been constructed on-site.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara
Section A

Then, having accepted offers by two public institutions, Sendai School of Design and Aomori Contemporary Art Centre, to participate in their artist-in-residence programs, the duo decided to build an unknown experience by linking the two institutions through a single residential housing project, to eventually constitute the house in Nara.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara
Section B

They broke House of 33 Years, which had been designed as a single house, into parts suitable for making in the two programs, so that the architecture would “move,” so to speak. Each work was also realised as an individual installation piece on which additional features were elaborated, responding to demands from the institution, characteristics of the space, and the chosen method of exhibiting.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara
Section C

In Sendai, Ghost House, a pavilion to sit on the roof, was built with the students of Sendai School of Design. The pavilion is an homage to Ghost House, one of the pavilions scattered on the large premises of the famous house of Philip Johnson and was given the same name. Over the summer it was sitting in the courtyard of a university campus and the students had grown a farm inside.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara
Section D

In Aomori, the main rooms in wood-structure was built and developed together with local carpenters, using materials available in Aomori, as an installation piece Obscure Architecture (House of 33 Years, Study), then to become a part of ‘Kime to Kehai’ exhibition at Aomori Contemporary Art Centre. This work always had a fresh look depending on the movement of the sunlight. Physically, this architectural work remained present in the same position, whereas the natural phenomena created by it kept flowing without stopping. After the exhibition period in each city, those elements were disassembled and loaded on a 4-ton truck, and carried to the destination, Nara, where they were recomposed to form the House of 33 Years.

House of 33 Years by Megumi Matsubara
Section D

Project name: House of 33 Years
Location: Nara, Japan
Architects: Megumi Matsubara and Hiroi Ariyama (Assistant Studio)
Client: private
Purpose: private residence
Structural engineer: Mitsuda Structural Consultants
Site area: 189 square metres
Building area: 76 square metres
Total floor area: 104 square metres
Structure: steel frame, wooden
Number of storeys: 2 storeys
Construction period: March 2011 – June 2013

The post House of 33 Years by Megumi
Matsubara and Assistant Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Japanese architect Tadashi Yoshimura created a living room lined with mud during the renovation of this 200-year-old family house in Nara.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

The folded mud screen forms a wall and ceiling opposite the room’s glazed facade, which slides back to transform the space into a porch in warmer weather.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

The house, named Wood Old House, comprises a cluster of separate blocks with small gardens and earthy pathways between.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Other rooms include a gallery, also lined with mud, as well as storage areas with wooden beam walls and translucent paper screens.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Another interesting project by Tadashi Yoshimura is a house with woven timber walls – see it here.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Photography is by Hitoshi Kawamoto.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Here’s some more text from the architect:


Project description

Wood Old House

This project is the renovation of a traditional wooden town house in Nara, Japan, built about 200 years ago, for a young couple and their children.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

This old house consists of several small buildings, and there are several spot gardens, and passage gardens between buildings.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

However, taking no thought of interaction between buildings and gardens, repairs have been carried out on numerous occasions, and the interior has also been redecorated with new materials. Except for the main structure and façade, the original model can no longer be seen.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

‘Void space’ carved out the old house, taking out new materials. Void space means the new large space turned into a porch by opening all sliding window panels, and the new small earthen floor space, connected existing spot gardens and passage gardens, facilitated lighting and ventilation. Making the new space, we reuse materials from old house, to the extent possible.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

By inserting this void space, it connects the new with the old, and a revival is achieved through a skilful fusion between buildings and gardens.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

We reuse structural members and old mud wall from old house as structural reinforcements and heat storage materials. And new outside materials are planned to be able to reuse in the future, binding with wedge.

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Architects: Tadashi Yoshimura Architects
Location: Gose-city, Nara, Japan

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects
Structural Engineers: Kazuhiro Yamaguchi
General Contractor: Nakayama Komuten

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Site area: 634 sq m
Building area: 139 sq m (renovation area)

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Total floor area: 139 sq m (renovation area)
Structure: wood; 1story

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Principal use: residence, gallery
Project Year: 2011

Wood Old House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Materials
External wall: Japan cedar, plaster
Inner wall: Japan cedar, pine, old mud wall

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

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

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

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

Click above for larger image

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

Click above for larger image

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

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Click above for larger image

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

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Click above for larger image

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

Wooden Block House by Tadashi Yoshimura Architects

Click above for larger image

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


See also:

.

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