Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects and Transsolar

Japanese studio Tetsuo Kondo Architects teamed up with environmental engineering firm Transsolar to encase a cloud inside this transparent two-storey cube (+ slideshow).

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

Tetsuo Kondo and Transsolar previously collaborated to produce an indoor cloud at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2010 and this second Cloudscapes installation recreated the experience in the sunken courtyard of the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT).

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

The cloud effect was formed by pumping three layers of air into the space. Cold dry air went in at the bottom, while hot humid air was fed into the middle and hot dry air was pumped in at the top.

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

This produced a canopy of clouds at the centre of the cube, which visitors could climb through using a central staircase.

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Above and top: photographs by Yasuhiro Takagi

“The temperature and humidity inside the container are controlled to keep the clouds at their designed height,” explained Tetsuo Kondo.

The transparent cube surrounding the cloud was built from a framework of metal tubes, with cross bracing that allowed the structure to respond to outside wind pressure.

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

“The edges of the clouds are sharp yet soft, and always in motion,” added the architect. “Their colour, density and brightness are constantly changing in tune with the weather and time of day.”

Tetsuo Kondo Architects also recently completed a family house that looks like a stack of cubes on the outside, but opens up inside to form one big bright space. See more design by Tetsuo Kondo »

Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Elevations – click for larger image

Clouds have featured in a couple of recent stories on Dezeen, including an art installation in a beaux-arts style room and a prefabricated holiday home. See more weather-themed architecture and design »

Here’s a project description from Tetsuo Kondo:


Cloudscapes at MOT

We created a small bank of clouds in the Sunken Garden of the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo. 
The clouds billow softly in a compact, transparent container and can be seen from the entrance hall, exhibition galleries, outdoor plaza, and other parts of the museum.

Climb the stairs inside the clouds’ container. When you climb beyond the clouds to reach the top, the museum,
 the surrounding buildings, and the sky stretch out above the clouds. The edges of the clouds are sharp yet soft, and always in motion. Their colour, density and brightness are constantly changing in tune with the weather and time of day. The temperature and humidity inside the container are controlled to keep the clouds at their designed height. The air inside the container forms three distinct strata, one cool and dry, at the bottom, a warm and humid middle stratum, and a hot and dry stratum at the top. The warm, humid layer is where the clouds form.

The transparent container is constructed of 48.6 millimetre diameter pipe. The elastic material added to the mid region, at a 6 metre ceiling height, makes the structure as a whole responsive to wind pressure. That elastic material also makes it possible to build the transparent container of nothing but thin pipes. The double layers of vinyl sheets dividing the strata ensure stability of temperature and humidity inside the structure.

The constantly changing clouds are both soft structures and part of the natural environment that surrounds
 us. It is not the structure alone but the invisible differences in humidity and temperature and the weather, the time of day, and other aspects of the surrounding environment, all influencing each other, little by little, that make this work an artistic whole.

Cloudscapes is, in effect, an experiment in creating a new type of architectural space, one that achieves integration in engagement with its environment.

Collaboration with Transsolar/Matthias Schuler
Location: Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Program: installation
Completion period: December 2012
Architect: Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Structural Engineer: Konishi Structural Engineers

The post Cloudscapes at MOT by Tetsuo Kondo
Architects and Transsolar
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House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

From the outside this house in Nagoya by Japanese architect Tetsuo Kondo looks like a pile of overlapping boxes, but inside it opens up to form one big bright space (+ slideshow).

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

As the home to family of four, House in Chayagasaka was planned by Tetsuo Kondo as a single space so that residents can always see what’s going on elsewhere in the house.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

“As both of the parents work, they wanted to have as many common areas as possible, in order to spend more time together as a family,” said Kondo. “So I decided to build a one-room house, with a lot of subtle balance between connected and separated areas.”

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

The main body of the two-storey building comprises six cuboidal volumes, with small gardens and balconies squeezed into the spaces between.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

A white metal staircase winds up through the centre of house, beginning as a rectilinear form but soon adopting a curved shape.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

This staircase leads up from a central living area to two children’s bedrooms and a bathroom, each set at a different level. Two final steps ascend to a terrace in the far corner of the building.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

“When making a house for a young family with children that will soon grow up, and the developing area around the house will change fast, it seems to make sense to design a house with very open architecture,” added Kondo.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

Glazed screens surround the two small gardens that puncture the volume of the house at ground floor level. One is positioned alongside a dining room at the rear, while the other pushes into the space of the living room.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

The floor steps down at the front of the house, defining the boundary of the master bedroom.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

Tetsuo Kondo founded his studio in 2006 and previously designed a house where every room leads through to a little garden. Other projects by the architect include a walkway that winds its way around tree trunks and a mirror that becomes cloudy when viewed from the side.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Photograph by Ken’ichi Suzuki

See more design by Tetsuo Kondo »
See more houses in Japan »

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

Photography is by Iwan Baan, apart from where otherwise stated.

Here’s a project description from Tetsuo Kondo Architects:


House in Chayagasaka

This is a private residential house for a family of four in Nagoya – a young couple and their two small children. The site is located close to a new metro station, in an area that is developing rapidly. As both of the parents work, they wanted to have as many common areas as possible, in order to spend more time together as a family. So I decided to build a one-room house, with a lot of subtle balance between connected and separated areas.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

In this project, I tried to achieve architecture that welcomes a large variety of things, in a state where all the parts are mutually interrelated. This architecture is not one dominated by a strong system or built in a well-ordered manner, but rather one that incorporates various meanings and it seems difficult to understand why it was made that way. When making a house for a young family with children that will soon grow up, and the developing area around the house will change fast, it seems to make sense to design a house with very open architecture, one with balance that can accept diversity.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

I designed a strange shaped one-room house by placing ordinary room-size boxes of variable shapes. I tried to deal at the same time with components which might normally not be directly related, such as widths, heights, structures, brightness, functions, shape, circulations, terrace, etc. The relationships between these things are very complex, and if one part would be changed, it would influence the whole building. However, from the perspective of a whole, it can be absorbed.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

I think this type of architecture can achieve a new kind of residential comfort, by mixing various things including the present and the future course of life, as well as the history and culture of the location.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image

It manages to maintain the diversity of a certain state of equilibrium with order. The order should not constrain the system, but it should rather loosely define its relationship. I aimed to create an architecture in such a soft order.

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Illustrative section

Location: Aichi, Japan
Program: Private house
Completion Period: September 2012
Total Floor Area : 89.55 sqm
Site Area: 97.58 sqm
Architect: Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Structural Engineer: Konishi Structural Engineers

House in Chayagasaka by Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Diagrammatic sections – click for larger image

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Tetsuo Kondo Architects
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A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo

A walkway by Tetsuo Kondo Architects winds its way around tree trunks and up into the canopy at a park in Tallinn, Estonia.

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo

Called A Path in the Forest, the 95-metre trail is supported by a steel tube that rests against the tree trunks, with no additional columns.

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo

The installation remains in place in Kadriorg Park until 22 October as part of LIFT11, a festival of urban installations in Tallinn’s public spaces for the European Capital of Culture Tallinn 2011.

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo

Tetsuo Kondo presented a similar structure at the venice Architecture Biennale last year, where visitors walked round a spiralling path and up into a cloud.

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo

Here are some more details from the architect:


In the elegant woods of Kadriorg, we added a path.

A path which relies on the forest as it floats through the woods with over 300 years of age.

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo

I feel that the appearance of the woods slightly changes when you walk along this path. We no longer are looking up at the woods from the ground but we get closer to the leaves and sliver through the branches. It is a piece of architecture which exists for the woods as the forest exists for the architecture. We can not change the form of the forest but we think the various elements in a forest can become one entity in this condition.

I hope that we can experience a forest, architecture, and an environment which we do not know yet.

A Path in the Forest by Tetsuo Kondo


See also:

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Cloudscapes by
Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Mirror by
Tetsuo Kondo Architects
Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

Mirror by Tetsuo Kondo Architects

Tetsuo Kondo Architects of Tokyo have designed a mirror that reflects a clear image when viewed straight-on but appears cloudy from the side. (more…)