Yashiki Mori Housing Proposal / HOLDUP

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Courtesy of HOLDUP

The proposal for the Yashiki Mori competition by HOLDUP elaborates on the Yashiki-rin housing typologies as a protection from environmental aggressions: windbreak forest (hot summer wind, cold winter wind, sandblast), barrier against fire, sunshade, air-purifier (carbon dioxide absorber and oxygen provider), sound-proof shield, etc. This natural eco-system composed of hedges and high trees circling the house could preserve wildlife, supply bamboo or lumber as construction material, fuel or fertilizer. It perfectly fits today’s concerns, i.e. keeping some distance with the surroundings but preserving openness at the same time. More images and architects’ description after the break.

In the past decades, transportation and communication technologies came to conquer wider territories, in parallel of a global city sprawl effect. Consequently, places that were actually remote are now physically and virtually connected, in a local, national or even international scale. As a result, we observed the birth of a hybrid “rurban” land, resulting from the progressive braiding of rural and urban areas. This evolution eventually generated new prospects coming with a fresh economy, original social relations and uncommon lifestyles. This phenomenon marks the advent of a new era where city and country aren’t necessarily antinomic, but are progressively merging.

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Cite: Alison Furuto. "Yashiki Mori Housing Proposal / HOLDUP" 04 Jun 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/239851/yashiki-mori-housing-proposal-holdup> ISSN 0719-8884

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