Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Tokyo practice Klein Dytham Architecture referenced traditional Japanese festivals, bathhouses, fishponds and timber houses for the interior of Google’s new Japan office (+ slideshow).

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Occupying several floors of the KPF-designed Roppongi Hills tower in Tokyo, Google Japan is intended to repeat the colourful and imaginative designs of the internet company’s other offices, but to also bring elements of local history and culture into each of the spaces.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

“Google request that each of their national offices around the world reflects the unique culture of its location,” explain architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein. “[Our] design for the earlier phases of the project had taken cues from the graphics of traditional Japanese fabrics and contemporary anime, but then Google requested an even more vivid evocation of Japanese culture.”

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

The architects imagined a typical bathhouse for one floor. White ceramic tiles cover the floors, while computer stations look like dressing tables with large mirrors and a painted mural of Mount Fuji spans the rear wall.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Elsewhere, perforated concrete-block walls define corridors through workspaces, intended to evoke narrow residential alleys. Informal meeting areas can be glimpsed through the perforations and are designed to look like little parks.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Different zones are marked by different colours and follow the palette of Google’s logos. Some of these logos can be spotted in the patterned wallpapers, which the architects based on Japan’s timber architecture.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Other details include a hairy cafe surrounded by carwash brushes, a mobile street-food stall and a digital fish pond populated with interactive koi carp. “[We were] looking to communicate the Japanese context without resorting to cliche”, say the architects.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Other Google office interiors completed in recent years include the Tel Aviv office, which includes a meeting area filled with orange trees, and the London headquarters, featuring Union Jack flags and allotments where staff can grow vegetables. See more stories about Google.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Klein Dytham Architecture’s other projects include YouTube’s Tokyo production studio, plus a bookstore that uses the logo of the brand on its walls. Dytham discusses this project in an interview we filmed at the World Architecture Festival last year. See more architecture by Klein Dytham Architecture.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Here’s a project description from Klein Dytham Architecture:


Klein Dytham architecture
Google Japan Phases 1,2,3,4

Klein Dytham architecture (KDa) recently completed an additional phase to their design for Google’s Japan office. This ambitious interior project is located in the Roppongi Hills tower in central Tokyo.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

In such a large project one of KDa’s key challenges was to develop a way to expand Google’s facilities that wasn’t repetitive or boring, and which also assisted wayfinding. To help staff feel comfortable and prevent visitors from becoming lost, KDa defined various zones across the floors and gave each a distinct character. Each zone was assigned a specific colour, the colours being modulated through different tones. This creates a “necklace” of differently coloured meeting rooms, each with a specific name and character, strung around the building’s large central core.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

On the one of the floors, KDa defined the circulation route around the meeting rooms with the perforated concrete block walls common in Tokyo’s winding residential lanes. In the city these block walls often provide glimpses into lush gardens, and KDa used them here to allow views into enticing spaces beyond the walls. Each of these “pocket parks” has a huge wall graphic of brightly coloured plants and can be used for gatherings and informal meetings.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

KDa also placed landmarks at key positions to help staff and visitors identify their location and navigate around the floor. KDa have provided mini- kitchens where staff can grab snacks and drinks, each space decorated a different colour. After having designed kitchens themed by Google colours – blue, yellow, red, green – on the lower floors, KDa then looked to create something even more memorable: a bight blue “hairy kitchen” clad in the giant brushes used in automatic carwashes.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Google request that each of their national offices around the world reflects the unique culture of its location. KDa’s design for the earlier phases of the project had taken cues from the graphics of traditional Japanese fabrics and contemporary anime, but then Google requested an even more vivid evocation of Japanese culture. Looking to communicate the Japanese context without resorting to cliché KDa incorporated surprising elements such as a full-scale yatai (mobile food stall) and a digital koi pond that greets people at one of the entrances – responding to hidden sensors, carp projected onto the floor move towards those who enter the space as if expecting to be fed.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

A set of spaces on another floor was themed after a sento, the traditional neighbourhood bathhouses now fast disappearing from Japan’s cities. Passing through a traditional noren curtain, leads to space instantly recognisable as a “wash area”, complete white ceramic tiles, wooden stools, and computer screens cunningly configured where mirrors would be expected. This leads on to a spacious “soaking bath” area – actually a presentation and training room – which like classic sento features a huge mural of Mount Fuji specially created for Google by one of Japan’s last living mural painters. This space is also used for external events, with the “wash area” becoming a reception space for drinks and catering.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

Nearby, a group of meeting rooms have a matsuri (traditional neighbourhood festival) theme. Here, red and orange wallpaper picks up patterns from the yukata robes and happi coats worn at festivals, wall graphics show photos of festival scenes, and sake and beer crates both act as impromptu seating and create a relaxed party atmosphere.

Google Japan by Klein Dytham Architecture

For previous sections of the interior, KDa created brightly coloured wallpaper patterns cleverly derived from refigured Google icons such as the Google Android and Google Map pin. For the new spaces, KDa developed a set of muted, timber-coloured wall graphics whose tone varies from light to dark wood. Subtly evoking Japan’s traditional timber architecture, the patterns occasionally incorporate cunningly hidden icons.

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YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Tokyo-based Klein Dytham Architecture has used the television-shaped icon of YouTube’s logo to decorate the walls of the video website’s new production studio in the Japanese capital (+ slideshow).

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein reproduced the red logo in lacquered ceramic to tile the walls of the reception. The tiles continue through to a lounge and a kitchen area, gradually fading to pink and then white.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

“Clear branding is everything in the trillon-clip video landscape we live and surf,” Dytham told Dezeen. “It is seems to work; Time magazine uses the wall in their news articles about YouTube globally!”

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

In some places the shape is also used to create wooden box shelves, while elsewhere it provides the framework for a wall of black and white photographs.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Located in the KPF-designed Mori Tower, YouTube Space Tokyo is the company’s third video production suite to open, following others in London and Los Angeles, and it contains filming studios, editing rooms, training areas and lounges.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

The main studio is arranged in front of a large window, allowing a skyline view as a backdrop for filming. Other features include a long curtain that can be used to partition spaces and modular sofas that can be reconfigured for different formats.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Dytham explains that the biggest challenge was fitting studio lighting into the ceiling heights of a typical office floor. “By locating the studios in areas of the floor plan with the least amount of air-conditioning ducting we could make them work in standard floor to floor heights,” he explained.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Klein Dytham Architecture also recently completed a Tokyo bookstore that, like the YouTube Space, uses the logo of the brand for the pattern on its walls. Dytham discusses this project in an interview we filmed at the World Architecture Festival.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

See more architecture by Klein Dytham »
See more new projects in Tokyo »

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Read on for more details from Klein Dytham Architecture:


Klein Dytham architecture
YouTube Space Tokyo

Klein Dytham architecture’s (KDa) project has its origins in a global act of generosity. YouTube has created YouTube Space Tokyo that provides free facilities for the use of their top video producers in Asia. Including studios, production suites, training areas, and lounges, the Tokyo center is one of a number of similar facilities YouTube are creating around the world – others are in London and Los Angeles. YouTube’s goal was to create a kind of ‘collaborative production facility’, providing both training and production support to help their most energetic producers elevate their videos to a fully professional level.

KDa’s unique interior project is located high in the Mori Tower in central Tokyo. On entering, the visitors encounter a visually striking wall of red panels derived from the YouTube’s iconic logo – the logo is three-dimensionalized, cast in lightweight ceramic and lacquered. Serving to orient visitors to the facility, the logos fade from bright red in the reception area to pink in the lounge to white in the café and kitchen area.

Around this KDa have arranged production studios, an audio recording space, a green screen studio, control rooms, an editing suite, a make-up room, green rooms, a VIP space, a café, and a large training room for seminars and learning software. All of the spaces – not just the studios – have been designed to allow shooting. The variety of wall surfaces, carpet shades, and ceiling configurations is intended to provide a wide range of settings. One wall serves as a ‘Hall of Fame’ showing images of the top producers. A super-long curtain – made from fabric by famed Tokyo manufacturers, Nuno – snakes through the interior allowing flexible division of the space. A custom-designed sofa can be rearranged to suit a variety of formats – panels, interviews, and so on. The space has also been arranged to maximize the use of the skyline view, including the iconic Tokyo Tower, as a shooting backdrop.

The project is remarkable in squeezing fully equipped production studios into a standard office floor. In the past, production studios required high ceilings to prevent the hot lighting rigs literally cooking performers. Modern LED lights, however, are cool and can be used in the space offered by high-rise office floors. KDa still needed to overcome considerable technical challenges, which they achieved in part by carefully placing the studios in areas of the floor relatively free of ducting and thereby gaining extra ceiling height.

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“There’s a very strong future for books” – Mark Dytham on Daikanyama T-Site

World Architecture Festival 2012: architect Mark Dytham of Klein Dytham Architecture talks to Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs about the future of books in the digital age in this movie we filmed at the World Architecture Festival earlier this month, where a bookstore he designed in Japan won the prize in the shopping centres category.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

“We’re no longer chasing the young consumer,” says Dytham. He explains that the average age of the population in Japan is 50 and includes people with plenty of free time and a disposable income, meaning that there is still a “very strong future for books” as well as tablets.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Designed for Japanese entertainment brand Tsutaya, Daikanyama T-Site comprises three buildings with T-shaped elevations that subtly reference the logo of the brand. Hundreds of interlocking Ts also create a lattice across each of these exterior surfaces. ”The client wanted a very stong branding on the building, without branding it,” says Dytham, and describes how they achieved this “at two different scales”.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Louvred steel bridges link up with a “magazine street” that stretches across the first floor of each block and is one of the details designed to encourage “social retail”. Dytham explains that: “People don’t get a chance to go and socialise, they don’t get a chance to meet somebody and this third space is becoming incredibly important.”

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Dytham, who’s based in Japan, finishes the discussion by talking about the continuing energy crisis in the country 18 months on. He describes how the population were able to instantly cut down their energy usage and declares it possible that “everybody in the world can reduce their energy consumption by 20 percent.”

Read more about Daikanyama T-Site in our earlier story, or see more stories about Klein Dytham Architecture.

We’ve filmed a series of interviews with award winners at the World Architecture Festival, which we’ll publishing over the next few days – see our interview about the World Building of the Year with architect Chris Wilkinson.

See all our stories about WAF 2012 »

Photography is by Nacasa & Partners.

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– Mark Dytham on Daikanyama T-Site
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Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

The latticed facade of this Tokyo bookstore by Klein Dytham Architecture comprises hundreds of interlocking T-shapes that subtly reference the logo of entertainment retailer Tsutaya (+ slideshow).

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

“The T idea for the project came to us during the initial briefing session with the CEO of Tsutaya,” architect Mark Dytham told Dezeen. “He was hoping for an iconic building, branded in a non-branded way, without having to rely on signage.”

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

The little shapes also combine to create larger Ts on the elevations of the three buildings that make up the complex.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

The grid created by the shapes lines up with the structural systems, and Dytham explained how this helped them to “determine the general layout” of each building.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

This layout was also influenced by the locations of several large trees, which the buildings nestle between.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Louvred steel bridges link up with aisles on the first floor of each block, which the architects refer to as the “magazine street”.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

As well as sales areas for books, CDs and DVDs, the store also contains a convenience store, a lounge and cafe.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Other projects we’ve featured by Klein Dytham Architecture include an airport lounge for Virgin Atlantic and a combined home and salon.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

See more stories about Klein Dytham Architecture »

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Photography is by Nacasa & Partners.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Here’s a project description from Klein Dytham:


T-Site, Daikanyama, Tokyo

Klein Dytham architecture won the T-Site commission in a 2 stage invited competition. 77 architects were invited to submit proposals and KDa made it to the final selection with Kengo Kuma, Atelier Bow Wow, Mikan Gumi and Kumiko Inui, before winning the project in the final round.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

KDa’s new Daikanyama T-Site is a campus-like complex for Tsutaya, a giant in Japan’s book, music, and movie retail market.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Located in Daikanyama, an up-market but relaxed, low-rise Tokyo shopping district, it stands alongside the legendary Hillside Terrace buildings designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Fumihiko Maki.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Slotted between large existing trees on the site, the three pavilions are organized by a “magazine street” that threads through the complex, blurring interior and exterior.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Tailored particularly to over-50 “premium age” customers, Tsutaya’s normal product range is complimented by a series of boutique spaces carrying carefully curated product ranges.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Other facilities include a café, an upscale convenience store, and the Anjin lounge, where visitors can browse a library of classic design magazines and books or peruse artworks for sale as they eat, drink, read, chat, or relax.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Externally, KDa’s characteristic wit emerges in subtle ways – the perforated screens of the façade are formed from the Ts of the Tsutaya logo, and much larger T-shapes are disguised in the building plans and elevations.

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Architecture and interior design: Klein Dytham architecture
Art Direction: Tomoko Ikegai
Architectural Consultant: RIA
Structural Engineer: Structured Environment
Main Contractor: Kajima Construction

Daikanyama T-Site by Klein Dytham Architecture

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

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Klein Dytham Architecture at Gallery MA

Tokyo practice Klein Dytham Architecture have sent us images of an exhibition of their work that was on show at Gallery MA in Tokyo, Japan, earlier this year (thanks to Jean Snow for pointing out our earlier error!) (more…)