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This
week's dose features projects by Stephen
Taylor Architects of London and the Office
of Ryue Nishizawa in Tokyo, as part of the Some
Ideas exhibition at the Canadian
Centre for Architecture in Montreal. Click on images for
larger views.
Stephen Taylor Architects is based in East London, an area
undergoing gentrification, a part of London's "urban
renaissance". Taylor's award-winning
Three Small Houses project
appears to be a contextual response to the gritty area characterized
by small lots and a high density. Actually the project inverts
the typical London typology of ground floor garden, by locating
the kitchen and dining on the top floor. Small porches, hidden
behind perforated gates at the front of the ground floor,
make up for the missing rear garden.
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Another East London project,
the House on Charlotte Road,
is similarly contextual in appearance and massing. A sober
dark brick facade aligns itself with its neighbors and the
sidewalk. An apartment occupies
the top two floors, with an office one floor below and retail
space on the ground and basement levels. A high degree of
programmatic diversity is achieved on a small lot, in a manner
that balances the gentrification spreading in the area by
providing for something besides highly desired residential
units. The apartment itself is as spartan
as the building's front, but in a monastic
manner that provides refuge in an area still gritty, at
least for the time being. |
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The minimalism of Taylor's buildings
is one characteristic shared by Ryue Nishizawa, also know
as Kazuyo Sejima's partner in SANAA.
His residential architecture also toys with the traditional
typologies of his home city. The Moriyama
House is an exceptional work. It is like a microcosm of
Tokyo itself, with ten cubic buildings
scattered about the corner site to create numerous outdoor
gardens. The owner currently rents some of the buildings,
creating a community of sorts on a typically small Tokyo lot.
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House
A sits on a narrow site in central Tokyo, a challenge
for bringing light into the various spaces, something shared
by most of these projects and most infill urban projects like
these. Ryue designed the house for one person as a series
of single- and double-height
spaces, shifted relative to each other to capture sunlight.
The architect describes each room as having the character
of a living room -- owing to the client's predilection for
entertaining guests. While conceptually not as impressive
as the Moriyama House, it achieves a lot with a little, an
outcome shared with Taylor's buildings, and perhaps making
their pairing in the CCA exhibition appropriate. |
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Some Ideas on Living in London and Tokyo by Stephen
Taylor and Ryue Nishizawa |
2008.05.12 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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