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Tuesday 25 December 2012

13 ODD JAPANESE HOUSES



Only in Japan: 13 Odd Houses by Suppose Design Office
By Steph,
Web Urbanist, 24 December 2012.

Houses that look like little more than concrete or steel boxes from the outside offer exceptionally creative, efficient and welcoming interiors conceived by Japan’s Suppose Design Office. The architecture firm has mastered the art of turning tight lots into spacious multi-level homes, and bringing the outdoors in with day-lit courtyards and gardens flourishing under transparent roofs and skylights.

1. Courtyard Home Inspired by Child’s Play


A series of disconnected structures are enclosed within a glass shell in this beautiful Buzen home, creating the feel of a private neighbourhood where children can safely play. Each individual room feels like its own house, with the day-lit hallways as streets.

2. Passive Solar House with Glass Walls


This ultramodern home in Otake is built to capture the optimal amount of sunlight each day for natural light, natural ventilation and temperature control. This passive solar design works with nature to cut heating, cooling and lighting costs.

3. Courtyards Between Each Room in Obama


Located in Obama City, this house looks from the outside as if it might be dark and industrial inside; the geometric white shape doesn’t have a single exterior window. Yet, step inside and you’ll find a bright and open space lined with warm wood. The interior of the home is divided with internal courtyards, many of which are illuminated with large skylights.

4. House in Seya Brings the Outdoors In


Copious amounts of wood, living trees and stones give the House in Seya the feel of an indoor garden. A pebbled interior courtyard leads to the living areas of the home, which is enveloped in a towering wooden frame that makes it feel much larger than it actually is.

5. Half-Tent House in Kodaira


Located in a residential area of Tokyo, this home features a garden that is cordoned off from the street by a large tent-like addition. The tent functions as a roof, wall and fence, making this outdoor area more private. Large sliding glass doors give the garden the feel of an indoor/outdoor extension of the house.

6. White Room Filled with Plywood Boxes


Making homes on small lots feel more spacious is Suppose Design Office’s specialty. This home outside Hiroshima is a great example. The interior of the main white volume of the home is filled with plywood ‘boxes’ that cordon off various rooms, creating three levels. The rooms have windows that open to the main ‘atrium’ living area.

7. Concrete House in Koamicho


Situated on a long, narrow plot in Koamicho, this two-story concrete home is built around interior courtyards that are glassed-in on each side for maximum day-lighting. “In a long, narrow space, we constructed walls, and by laying out a space in which we experience many rooms, we turn ‘narrowness’ into ‘openness’,” say the architects. “Further, taking rooms and gardens as equivalent, we created spaces that are like exteriors, calling them ‘garden rooms.’”

8. Monolithic Triangular In-Ground Home


Dark and dramatic, this structure looks more like a monument than a private residence. The triangular-shaped dwelling sits atop a first floor that has been covered in earth on all sides for privacy and temperature control. As modern as it may look, the home was inspired by traditional ‘pit houses’ of Japan, which have been in use for nearly 2,000 years.

9. Minimalist Home with House-Shaped Windows


A nod to more conventional home shapes can be seen in the windows of this large, rectilinear house on the beach. Suppose Design gave the home a fluid, changeable layout inside that’s free of the constraints of most residences, using floating wood platforms and mobile wood-and-glass partitions.

10. Innovative Raised-Corner House


It looks as if some giant came along, lifted the corner of this house and slid a concrete wall beneath it. It’s an extremely unconventional and creative solution to letting daylight into a home while maintaining optimal privacy for its inhabitants. This raised corner also creates a private courtyard - one of three offering bright and airy spaces shielded from the street.

11. House in Ekoda with Rooftop Conservatory


A three-story house in Ekoda, Tokyo, has been renovated to create six apartments - and, most notably, to include an incredible bathroom in the rooftop conservatory. The ceilings inside were removed to expose the bare steel frame of the building, and new rooms were created from pale wood.

12. House in Matsuyama Has Views from Every Room


Every single room in this Matsuyama home has a view of the surrounding scenery thanks to large glass walls. “By spacing out structurally necessary walls we’ve created a design where a good view can be had from anywhere, but that still possess earthquake resistant elements. This also allows for larger openings, which were difficult with wood frame houses.”

13. Commanding Views at the House in Fukuyama


Built into a hillside beneath a road, House in Fukuyama is almost entirely open to views of the city on one side, with the rest of the home shielded from the eyes of neighbours. The roof of the home is level with the street, requiring visitors to descend into its interior via cantilevered stairs.

[Source: Web Urbanist. Edited.]


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