Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Unfinished plywood and cement smeared over concrete give a renovated Tokyo apartment the appearance of an elegant building site.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Japanese architects Naruse Inokuma tore away wallpaper and applied additional layers of cement and putty to create a mottled surface over the exposed concrete.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Sliding doors between the rooms of the Setagaya Flat are made from larch plywood and could be mistaken for construction hoarding.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

The rooms have new plywood floors and are minimally furnished.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Dezeen has featured a few projects from Naruse Inokuma Architects in the past, including an installation of forest sceneryclick here to see all our projects about Naruse Inokuma.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Another recent project to feature unfinished walls is a Paris cafe filled with scientific apparatus – see the story here.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Photography is by Masao Nishikawa.

Here are some more details from Naruse Inokuma Architects:


Setagaya Flat

This is an interior project of an apartment house built with box frame construction. The flat has favorable circumstances, a largish plan and location where third floor in category 1 low-rise exclusive residential district. But, on the other hand, there is difficulty that hardly modifies walls.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

So we made elaborative adjustment for whole elements except the wall to create an expanse of space while using existing wall.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

To be concrete, leaving a plan structure that organized by long corridor on the north side of the flat and rooms access from the corridor as it is, put dramatic finishing on one facade of each room and arranged a kitchen, display shelf and countertop by layer.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

In a living room, those elements seem overlapped, and that makes a space more dynamic.

Setagaya Flat by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Four different finishing materials used; exposed concrete, cement rendering, putty with clear coating, and larch plywood. Exposed concrete is old skeleton and larch plywood is new. But cement rendering and putty, actually appeared on the wall after taking off wallpaper, and. we overlay cement and putty on them. By frequently using intermediate material, which is new but from old element, remarkable interior is realized. Here, old building fit in new well and age-old beauty remain.


See also:

.

Sa House by
Yosuke Ichii
Kokura Tanaka House by Akinari TanakaAMA House by
Katsutoshi Sasaki

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Overlapping arches divide classrooms in this temporary school in Tokyo by Japanese architects Atelier SNS.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The International School of the Sacred Heart provides a kindergarten on the ground floor and a separate junior school above.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Classrooms, cloakrooms and the staff room are accessed from a central hall on each floor and there are no corridors inside the building.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The curved walls integrate bookshelves, white-boards and furniture for each of the nine classrooms.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The temporary building will be used until a permanent school is constructed in ten years time.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

More stories about education on Dezeen »

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Photography is by Hiroshi Ueda and Seiichi Oosawa.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The following information is from Atelier SNS:


International School of the Sacred Heart Temporary Building

∞ shaped walls to symbolise children’s infinite potential that make up the building

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The Kindergarten and Junior School (1st & 2nd grade) temporary building project has been built on a very limited school field. This field had to be used as part of the temporary building and school playground. We were working with limited space.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

We had to build a temporary building that is compact and efficient therefore we planned a circular design. As a result, we planned a cluster from where we have a center hall with 7 branches all leading to each individual open classroom.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The walls are designed to be reusable shelves. The shelves are mounted with desks, chairs and storage. This can be transferred to the new completed building in the future.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Classrooms are divided by ∞ shaped walls to symbolise children’s infinite potential.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The entangled arches represent children all over the world holding hands. The meaning of having no walls where the arches cross is to let children know that the world is without borders.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The ∞ shaped walls are used as bookshelves. The walls are well used and the storage is made on the walls which are closed on one side.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

There are no hallways and students access to classrooms from the center. Each classroom is color coordinated, so students easily find their classrooms.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The round-shaped hanging ceiling is the air conditioning system covered by wooden louvers.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The entrance to the school curves to welcome the children with open arms.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The approach to the Kindergarten and Junior school is separated by an approach ramp, upper (JS) and the lower level staircase (Kindergarten).

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The Kindergarten may also be entered through the ground level.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The extended cantilever flat roof protects the building from the sunlight and rain. Just like the Japanese ‘Engawa’, the mid-term area helps with conserving energy and running cost.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Since this will be used as a temporary building I have designed many parts of the class room to be detached and reusable.The floor consists of one room which is divided by removable walls to separate each class room. The walls are also reusable because they are used as back shelves and storage.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

The entangled arches looks as though you are going through a though you are going through a tunnel.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Click above for larger image

At one end of the tunnel, you reach the mirror wall where you can constantly reflect on. An area of reflection.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Click above for larger image

At the other end of the tunnel, you see the future light / sunlight which guides you into the bright future.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Click above for larger image

The desk and chairs are mounted into the wall. This enables the children to use any area along the wall to do their work.

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Click above for larger image

Location: Shibuya Ward, Tokyo
Client: International School of the Sacred Heart
Years: 2010
Plot area: 57.212.46 m2
Height: 7.53 m
Floors: 2 above ground
Covered area: 518.28 m2
Total floor area: 759.58m2

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Click above for larger image

Architects: Tsuneyuki Okamoto – AteleirSNS
Structures: Span Sekkei
Facilities: SP Sekkei
Contractors: Nakano Corporation

International School of the Sacred Heart by Atelier SNS

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Kindergarten Terenten
by Feld72
Kindergarten Kekec by
Arhitektura Jure Kotnik
Tellus Nursery School by
Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

Akio Hirata’s Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

Hats by Japanese milliner Akio Hirata appear to float between the floor and ceiling in this installation by Japanese designers Nendo.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

The 4000 hats are suspended from invisible threads, surrounding visitors and appearing to hover like ghosts.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

The majority of the hand-made hats are white, interspersed with the occasional coloured or patterned piece.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

The installation forms part of a retrospective of Hirata Akio’s work at the Spiral Garden in Tokyo.

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

More projects by Nendo on Dezeen »
More exhibition installations on Dezeen »

Akio Hirata's Exhibition of Hats by Nendo

Photography is by Daici Ano.

Here are some more details from Nendo:


“Akio Hirata’s Exhibition of Hats”

The graphic and exhibition design for the first major Japanese retrospective of internationally-known milliner Hirata Akio’s seventy years of work. For the exhibition space, we wanted to make Hirata’s hats stand out.

The mass-produced non-woven fabric hats we created for the space are the antithesis of Hirata’s carefully handmade hats, and bring them into sharp relief through dramatic contrast.

Hirata oversaw the shape of these hats, which float and stream through the exhibition like ghosts or shells of the real hats exhibited. Some are exhibition stands; others become walls, ceilings and diffusers to scatter light through the space. Flooded with roughly 4000 of these ‘ghost hats’ as though shrouded in a cloud, the exhibition space softly invites visitors inside. There, they find not clear-cut paths to follow but an environment in which they can wander and discover Hirata’s creations as they like, as a way of physically experiencing the creative freedom that underlies Hirata’s work.

Exhibition Information
June 15th – July 3rd, 2011 at Spiral Garden
Address: 5-6-23 Minami-Aoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo


See also:

.

2D/3D Chairs by Yoichi
Yamamoto for Issey Miyake
Contemporary Craftsmanship
by CuldeSac for Hermès
24 Issey Miyake Shop at
Shibuya Parco by Nendo

The Cat House by Key Operation

The Cat House by KOP

This Tokyo house by Japanese architects Key Operation has been designed around the movements of the client’s pet cat, writes Yuki Sumner.

The Cat House by KOP

Stepping-stone shelves allow a cat to move between rooms in The Cat House through high level openings, without using the landing and stairs.

The Cat House by KOP

With integrated book shelves, the landing doubles up as a library and study.

The Cat House by Key Operation

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

The Cat House by KOP

Photography is by Key Operation, apart from where otherwise stated.

The Cat House by Key Operation

The following is from the architects:


Neko no Ie (The Cat House)

A century ago, the famous Japanese novelist Sosuke Natsume wrote a novel called “I Am a Cat (Wagahai Wa Neko De Aru).” It is written from the point of view of a cat.

The Cat House by KOP

The cat, who remains nameless during the novel’s first chapter, lives in a house with a teacher and his family. He is angry that he is not regarded as an equal member of the family in this household. “I will never catch mice,” the cat announces haughtily, not wishing to make himself useful.

The Cat House by KOP

What if, however, there was a house, which has been designed specifically with a cat in mind? What would it look like? The Japanese architect Akira Koyama of Key Operation Inc. has recently designed a house for a young family, which included a pet cat, in the densely populated Taishido district, west of Tokyo. Undoubtedly, this house would have made Natsume’s cat green with envy.

The Cat House by KOP

Neko no Ie (The Cat House) stands on a typically compact, rectilinear site (7 meters wide, 12 meters deep) along a narrow residential street, just big enough for a single car to pass through.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

Although the plot is small, the client (including the cat) did not specify the need for an outdoor garden space, and so the architect decided to set the house back by 3 meters from the street, thereby creating a void, synonymous in Japan with a sense of luxury.

The Cat House by KOP

The upper section of the house is further set back from the ground level, generating a balcony. It is generally perceived that the Japanese architects have a greater freedom of expression than the Western counterparts but we forget that there are a number of restrictions that the Japanese architects face when designing buildings in Japan, and this is no exception.

The Cat House by KOP

There is a law, for example, restricting the owning of a car to those who can ensure its parking space. Neko no Ie, like many houses on the street, accommodates a garage within the house.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

The architect faced yet another restriction imposed in this area. It forbade the use of bright colours on exterior facades so that the ‘scenery’ of the area is conserved. Neko no Ie’s grey stucco façade complies with this regulation.

The Cat House by KOP

Undeterred, however, Koyama subtly managed to subvert both of these restrictions by painting the inside of the garage bright pink, therefore making a feature out of what is usually a dark and dingy space and injecting much-needed playfulness in this otherwise boring grey neighbourhood.

The Cat House by KOP

The house’s asymmetrical roofline maximizes both its playfulness as well as its volume. The architect has created within a complex interior space consisting of rooms of varying sizes, which are stack on top of each other over three floors.

The Cat House by KOP

One would not be able to observe such a structure from outside of the house, but it reflects the layout of the area, which has a mixture of detached houses, both large and small.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

The biggest room in the house is the dining/living room, stretched horizontally to fit the whole width of the house. By also extending the room vertically, the architect has opened up this room to the rest of the house.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

What look like shelves jutting out of one wall of this room are actually steppingstones for the pet cat to enter into the adjacent rooms through the openings placed higher up on the wall.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

This arrangement leaves the ample staircase and landings, which double up as a library, undisturbed from the burst of activities of the feline member of the family, while the rest of the family uses them as a place of quietude.

The Cat House by KOP

Moreover, just as the garage became the visual focal point for the exterior of the house, the staircase, painted also brightly pink, signals a gathering of all the separate interior sections of Neko no Ie.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

By varying the sizes of the rooms and painting them in different colours, the architect has emphasized their uniqueness and separateness.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

At the same time, he has managed to link the rooms through small and large openings so that none of the rooms is completely isolated. Autonomy is respected but isolation is discouraged.

The Cat House by KOP

For instance, a large opening in the wall of the dining/living room, which looks into the kitchen, allows the person who is cooking to connect with the person who is being served.

The-Cat-House-by-KOP

In the meantime, the cat can slip into the study located above the kitchen through yet another, this time smaller, opening.

The Cat House by KOP

The rooms’ co-dependence is thus implicitly emphasized.

The Cat House by KOP

Neko no Ie is a symbolic celebration of the emergence of the modern Japanese family, more democratic than the traditional one preceding it, allowing each member to flourish independently while nurturing a supportive environment.

The Cat House by KOP

Ironically, a pet cat was an integral part of it.

Text by Yuki Sumner, 2011


See also:

.

Yachiyo
by Atelier Tekuto
House by Yoshio Oono
Architect & Associates
House in Fukuyama
by Suppose Design Office

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

CELL by SUGAWARADAISUKE

Architects Sugawaradaisuke of Tokyo and Paris have completed two studio apartments on separate floors of a Tokyo apartment block, divided by twisting forms in the centre of each. 

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Called Cell + wood/fabric, the two interiors have the same plan but have been executed in different materials: one in wooden panels and the other with fabric screens.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

More apartments on Dezeen »

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Photographs are by Takumi Ota unless otherwise stated.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Here are some more details from Sugawaradaisuke:


“CELL” is a SOHO “one-room apartment” renovation project. It is situated in a 30 year old “one-room apartment” building in the downtown area of Tokyo.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

There are two small one room apartments, with the same plan, on different storeys. The main target is to maximize the functions and space perception in a confined area.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Operation

A center-core planning is selected as the first zoning for the small room according to existing conditions, openings in 3 directions and “lifeline pipes”.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

There are three areas. “Equipment Core”, “Free Space” and “Intermediate Area”. Each area shares one space to dominate maximum functions and depth like a “CELL”.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

The twisting boundary surfaces are carefully planned to control the connection between each area without doors.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Result

CELL is a small one-room SOHO apartment that maximizes the functions and space perception within a confined area, designed with a “cell group behavior”.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

This place shows us various aspects and connections between areas according to moving viewpoints, sunlight and the different activities.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

The experience in “CELL” may be the same as with a forest or field walk, giving us a sense of discovery and surprise.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Above photograph is by Daisuke Sugawara

Different material but One form

Cell is two different studio apartments, each on different stories in the one apartment building, with the same plan. One is designed with free curved surfaces of fabric, the other with timber triangular surfaces.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Above photograph is by Daisuke Sugawara

“CELL + wood” composed by triangular surfaces, looks like an abstract mountain range with sculptural forms and the grain of wood.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

“CELL+ fabric” composed by curved surfaces, looks like a cloud generating various shadows on the surface and through the translucent material when viewed from the other side.

Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke

Title: CELL + wood/fabric
Location: 2nd and 3rd floor, Sakai-Mansion, Katsushika, Tokyo, JAPAN
Function: SOHO one-room apartment
Area 29.72sqm
Architect: Daisuke Sugawara / SUGAWARADAISUKE
Design period:Jun-November,2010
Construction period: November,2010-March,2011
Client: Seven Seasons Investment.
Construction: Marui Kousan Corporation
Cell + wood/fabric by Sugawaradaisuke


See also:

.

Switch
by Yuko Shibata
AZB
by Geneto
Near House by
Mount Fuji Architects Studio

Musashino Art University Libraryby Sou Fujimoto Architects

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Photographer Edmund Sumner has sent us these photographs of a university library in Tokyo by Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto that has an exterior of timber shelves covered by planes of glass.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

The massing of the two-storey library at Musashino Art University is composed entirely from the shelves, which will hold the books.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Circulation routes spiral around both ground and first floor between apertures cut-out of the shelving.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

The library also includes a closed archive, which is located in the basement.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

More architectural photography by Edmund Sumner on Dezeen »

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

More projects by Sou Fujimoto Architects on Dezeen »
More about Edmund Sumner on Dezeen »

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

The following information is from Sou Fujimoto:


Musashino Art University Museum and Library

This project is a new library for one of the distinguished art universities in Japan. It involves designing a new library building and refurbishing the existing building into an art gallery, which will ultimately create a new integration of the Library and the Art Gallery.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

The project described hereinafter is the plan of the new library which sits within the first phase of the total development.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Acting as a huge ark, a total of 200,000 units, of which 100,000 will be out in an open-archive, while the other half within closed-archive, rests within this double-storey library of 6,500 ㎡ in floor area.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Library made from bookshelves

When I thought of the elements which compose an ultimate library, they became books, bookshelves, light and the place.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

I imagined a place encircled by a single bookshelf in the form of a spiral. The domain encased within the infinite spiral itself is the library. Infinite forest of books is created from layering of 9m high walls punctuated by large apertures.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

This spiral sequence of the bookshelf continues to eventually wrap the periphery of the site as the external wall, allowing the external appearance of the building to share the same elemental composition of the bookshelf-as-the-library.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

One’s encounter with the colossally long bookshelf within the university landscape registers instantaneously as a library, yet astonishing in its dreamlike simplicity.
The library most library-like.
The simplest library.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Investigation and Exploration

Investigation and exploration are two apparent contradictions inherent in the design of libraries.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Investigation is, by definition, a systematic spatial arrangement for the purpose of finding specific books. Even in the age of Google, the experience of searching for books within the library is marked by the order and arrangement of the physical volume of books.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

The opposing concept to Investigation is the notion of Exploration. The significance of library experience is also in discoveries the space engender to the users. One encounters the space as constantly renewed and transforming, discovers undefined relationships, and gains inspiration from unfamiliar fields.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

To achieve the coexistence of the two concepts, spatial and configuration logics beyond mere systematics is employed.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Here, the two apparent contradictions inherent in libraries are allowed to coexist by the form of spiral possessing two antinomic movements of radial path and rotational movement. The rotational; polar configuration achieves investigation, and the numerous layers through the radial apertures engender the notion of Exploration through an infinite depth of books.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

One can faintly recognise the entirety of library and at the same time imagine that there are unknown spaces which are rendered constantly imperceptible.

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

SOU FUJIMOTO
Musashino Art University Museum & Library

Tokyo, Japan
Design: 2007-09
Construction: 2009-10

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Architects: Sou Fujimoto Architects– principal-in-charge; Sou Fujimoto, Koji Aoki, Naganobu Matsumura, Shintaro Homma, Tomoko Kosami, Takahiro Hata, Yoshihiro Nakazono, Masaki Iwata, project team
Client: Musashino Art University
Program: University Library

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Click above for larger image

Consultants: Eishi Katsura, adviser;
Jun Sato Structural Engineers–Jun Sato, Masayuki Takada, structural;
Kankyo Engineering–Takafumi Wada, Kazunari Ohishima, Hiroshi Takayama, MEP;
Taku Satoh Design Office–Taku Satoh, Shingo Noma, Kuniaki Demura, Inoue
Industries–Takafumi Inoue, Azusa Jin, Yosuke Goto, Hideki Yamazaki,

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Click above for larger image

Furniture & Sign; Sirius Lighting Office–Hirohito Totsune, Koichi Tanaka, lighting;
CAMSA–Katsuyuki Haruki, facade;
STANDARD–Keisou Inami, skylight
General contractor: Taisei Corporation–Tsukasa Sakata
Structural system: steel frame, partly reinforced concrete
Major materials: wood shelf, glass, exterior; wood shelf, tile carpet, polycarbonate plate ceiling, interior

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Click above for larger image

Site area: 111,691.93 m2
Built area: 2,883.18 m2
Total floor area: 6,419.17 m2

Musashino Art University Library by Sou Fujimoto Architects

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Tokyo Apartment by
Sou Fujimoto Architects
Pearl Academy of Fashion
by Morphogenesis
Yakisugi House
by Terunobu Fujimori

Alice in Wonderland Restaurant

Le studio Fantastic Design Works Co. a eu la bonne idée de reprendre Alice au pays des merveilles pour décorer un restaurant à Tokyo. Jouant avec ingéniosité entre les différents éléments du conte et les décors du restaurant, le tout permet de donner une ambiance unique et amusante.



alice-in-wonderland-restaurant1

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alice-in-wonderland-restaurant4

alice-in-wonderland-restaurant2

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Previously on Fubiz

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Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

This house in a mountain region outside of Tokyo by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates is composed of five connected cottages.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

Each of the larch-clad cottages of Inbetween House varies in size and has a different single roof pitch, with overhangs that overlap one another to create connections internally.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

The buildings have a fan arrangement on site that adds further variation to the shape of the interior spaces, from which there are wide views of the surrounding landscape.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

Photography is by Iwan Baan

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

Here are some further details from the architects:


The client chose the sloped site surrounded by Japanese larch trees and located in a mountainous region, an hour away from Tokyo on a bullet train, as their ideal location for their home where they can retreat from their busy work in the city.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

The house sits on an artificially leveled area of the site created thirty years ago and left unused. Since the client wanted a house seamlessly blend into the natural surrounding, topography and local culture, we designed this house as a collection of small mountain cottages.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

It consists of five single pitched roof cottages that are clad in the local larch wood siding. Rather than using a complex construction technology, it is built in a traditional Japanese wood construction method so that local builders can skillfully craft each structural wood member. Each cottage varies in size to fit its function and set on site at 30 degree increments to best fit the topography and to face unique views.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

All cottage roofs have varying slopes and overhangs that touch the overhangs of adjacent cottages, creating gap spaces between these cottages, a simulacrum of alleys in a city. The triangular “connecting” roofs span between these overhangs to capture these gap spaces as a single fluid public interior space, which serves as a living room or a circulation space and feels like being outside looking at mountains in the distance. Since these connecting roofs bend & fold to connect the cottages at multiple angles & heights, the in-between space results in a spatial & structural warpage.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

The design intent of this house is not the final architectural form, but rather, establishing a set of design rules of cottage placements and connections, which allows the house to be freely arranged to satisfy any requirements and adoptable to any future changes or additions, prolonging its building life.

Inbetween House by Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates

Place: Karuizawa, Nagano, Japan
Architect: Koji Tsutsui Architect & Associates, Koji Tsutsui, Satoshi Ohkami
Structural Engineers: ANARCHItects(CG), Hirotsugu Tsuboi
General contractor: Sasazawa Construction, Inc.
Photographer: Iwan Baan
Site Area: 1956.16m2
Floor Area: 178.43m2
Completion Year: 2010


See also:

.

House in Hieidaira
by Tato Architects
House in Kobe
by Keiichi Sugiyama
House in Fukawa
by Suppose Design Office

The Rhythm of Spacetime

Le motion designer Dilshan Arukatti basé à Paris nous montre tout son talent dans cette vidéo réalisée pour The Bullit Agency, spécialisée dans le booking de DJs reconnus. Mettant en scène le rythme de l’espace-temps sur notre planète, la vidéo est à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



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rhythmofspacetime2

rhythmofspacetime1

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SN.House by atelierA5

SN.House by atelierA5

Japanese architects atelierA5 have completed this four-storey house in Tokyo enclosed by a perforated metal screen.

SN.House by atelierA5

The SN. House is located on a narrow side street in a dense residential area of the city.

SN.House by atelierA5

The first two storeys are screened by perforated metal sheets, which form the entrance hall and service corridor on the ground floor.

SN.House by atelierA5

The roof of the service corridor creates a terrace for the first floor living space.

SN.House by atelierA5

The  top two floors are set back to adhere to local regulations and create terraces for each level.

SN.House by atelierA5

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

Photographs are by Ken’ichi Suzuki Photography Studio.

The following is from the architect:


SN. House by atelierA5

SN. House is located in a dense residential area in Tokyo. The building site is 80 m2 big facing to a narrow side street. To use a small site like this in an effective way it was important to consider the way of placing a building volume in the site. If the distance between the outside wall and the site boundary is narrow it produces an unusable gap. If the distance is wide enough the outside space can be useful but it reduces the inside space.

Our focus for the design was to create an optimal living condition and maximal usable areas within a small site by redefining the relation between the outside walls and the site boundary.

SN.House by atelierA5

In order to keep the privacy for the ground floor and the 1st floor we encased the site with a two storey high screen on the site border instead of having a big distance to the neighbors and lose too much area.

This screen is made of punched metal sheets creating a semi-interior space by keeping a little distance to the actual building. The semi-interior space on the ground floor is used as an entrance hall and a service corridor covered with a steel-grating roof. The roof is the terrace of the 1st floor, which extends the space of the living room. The combination of the screen with the semi-interior space brings not only privacy but also filtered sunlight, wind and views. The outside walls of the 2nd and penthouse were set back, so that it created nice terraces for each floor and solved strict setback regulations at the same time.

SN.House by atelierA5

Credits
Architect: Sadahiro Shimizu, Masatoshi Matsuzaki, Yuko Shimizu /atelier A5

SN.House by atelierA5

Structural planning: Hayata Matou

SN.House by atelierA5

Location: Minamikarasuyama Setagaya-ku Tokyo Japan

SN.House by atelierA5

Completion year: 2010

SN.House by atelierA5

Total area

  • site area; 80.30sqm
  • building area; 47.99sqm
  • total floor area; 126.61sqm

Structure: Wood Structure


See also:

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Inside Out by
Takeshi Hosaka Architects
House I by
Yoshichika Takagi
House in Ise by Takashi
Yamaguchi & Associates