House in Bungotakada / Yabashi Architect & Associates

House in Bungotakada / Yabashi Architect & Associates

House in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Windows, Stairs, Beam, HandrailHouse in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - FacadeHouse in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Beam, HandrailHouse in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Beam, WindowsHouse in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - More Images+ 12

Bungotakada, Japan
  • Architects: Yabashi Architect & Associates
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  101
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Tetsuya Yashiro
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Lixil Corporation, NIPPON STEEL, Sumikin, lauan
House in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Windows, Facade
© Tetsuya Yashiro

Text description provided by the architects. The owner's request was a spacious and bright living room, a plan that felt family signs, a sleeping space for guests. There are various forms satisfying this demand. I studied a format that is one of them. In order to secure the cost and brightness, we decided not to rely on a unit called a joinery or wall based room but a gentle segment method.

House in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Windows, Stairs, Beam, Handrail
© Tetsuya Yashiro

While repeating the study, by partitioning the large airspace by the floor only, the level difference creates a place and discovers the state where the state of light and the height regulate the quality of the space, and they substitute for walls and fittings It became a three-dimensional configuration that divides the space.

House in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Windows, Beam
© Tetsuya Yashiro
House in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Beam, Windows
© Tetsuya Yashiro

Each space is not independent as a room and is always connected to some space. The connection of the unclosed space will share light and wind, and even the boundary will be shared. Sitting down at the boundary of space, reading books, leaving yourself are done beyond the space area. Floor and space quality of various levels are integrated under a symbolic roof, and the framework that it represents has literally been a framework supporting housing as being beyond structural implications.

House in Bungotakada  / Yabashi Architect & Associates - Facade
© Tetsuya Yashiro

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Cite: "House in Bungotakada / Yabashi Architect & Associates" 07 Nov 2017. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/883143/house-in-bungotakada-yabashi-architect-and-associates> ISSN 0719-8884

© Tetsuya Yashiro

“零”私密住宅,让房子做‘光合作用’ House in Bungotakada / 矢桥彻建筑设计事务所

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