|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The
following text and images are courtesy Anna Nakamura + Taiyo
Jinno of EASTERN
design office. Click on images for larger color views.
See also coverage elsewhere of other recently completed projects:
Slit
Court, Slit
House, and MON
Factory/House.
This house [completed 2007] does not look like a house. The
shape of the house traces
the boundary of the village, which consists of six houses
in all. There is a position to observe the village from afar.
Our intention is to form scenery from there, to create a shape
that naturally extends the stone wall of old times. The horizontal
slit carved there. It becomes familiar within the scenery
of the village.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
When you enter the house, you
will be surprised at the sequence of views that the slits
cut out and the spaciousness
there. Because of the horizontal
slits surrounding the whole house there is scenery wherever
you look. The village in the deep place is seen in the slit
in the north. Sequence of the mountain continues far away.
The river is seen in the slit in the east. Children bubble
over to catching sweetfish there. Tsukiaimichi (a
communal alley) can be seen through the slit in the shoji
in the south. The shrine where the forest and this village
are defended is seen in the slit in the west. |
|
|
|
 |
|
There is the one Tsukiaimichi.
Though the road belongs to somebody of the village, everyone
in the village may freely pass through. Someone in the village
strolls his dogs on Tsukiaimichi, they stand chatting
and he takes a shortcut. The client gives importance to the
Tsukiaimichi. She wishes to defend the privacy without
closing the view to outside. |
|
|
|
 |
|
The stone wall is extended. Thus
the retaining wall is made. It forms Tsukiaimichi
surrounding the site at the position without a feeling of
pressure. Tsukiaimichi goes up to the courtyard through
the retaining wall where the width is narrowed once. The retaining
wall lowers gradually and disappears into ground; the view
opens. But the stone wall 170cm (5-1/2 feet) high obstructs
the view into the house from passersby. And the stone wall
of 120cm (4 feet) high appears; here is the entrance. The
shoji where the slit was put
so as not to see the inside faces the courtyard.
These become like "Invisible Layers" between Tsukiaimichi
and the life scene, creating an ambiguous boundary.
|
| |
|
|
Horizontal House in Shiga, Japan
by EASTERN design office |
2009.11.16 |
|
| |
|
Click
on images below for larger views.
|
| |
|
|