Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects

Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows, Stairs, Facade, HandrailVilla MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, Living Room, Sofa, Table, Windows, Beam, DeckVilla MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, Windows, BeamVilla MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography, WindowsVilla MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - More Images+ 18

Minamiboso, Japan
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Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Koichi Torimura

Text description provided by the architects. The footprint of this vacation home dances around the complex conditions of the site. Although the site is splendidly situated overlooking an ocean view to the southeast, there is an elevation gap of about 1.4 meters in the center, around an outcropping of bedrock, and an unbuildable area cutting into the property on the street side. By necessity, the detached building housing a two-car garage, and the guest room is situated on the east side, where the elevation gap is smallest, but the client requested that the main house weaves around the difficult site conditions. 

Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows, Stairs, Facade, Handrail
© Koichi Torimura
Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Image 21 of 23
Plan
Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, Living Room, Sofa, Table, Windows, Beam, Deck
© Koichi Torimura
Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, Dining room, Table, Windows, Chair, Beam
© Koichi Torimura

At our first client presentation, we proposed a plan comprised of interconnected triangles, but this design was not rigidly fixed; rather, our approach allowed for the forms to be adjusted by “pinching” the roof peaks as we developed a more detailed plan.  And in fact, as we continued with the design process, we gradually adjusted the peaks in response to client requests regarding the interior, so that each roof segment contained a space appropriately scaled for its use. Our Phase Dance project (2019) employed a similar approach, which we dubbed “modal planning”—a flexible method that allows us to vary the scale of spaces according to how they are used, instead of controlling the overall form through a powerful geometric principle.  

Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, Wood, Facade, Beam
© Koichi Torimura
Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Interior Photography, Windows, Beam
© Koichi Torimura

The roof slabs, which amplify the triangular shapes of the footprint, are supported by polygonal columns that vary in form throughout the home, and, in places, by bearing walls. Interior air volume requirements determined the rhythm of the slabs and the volumes of the spaces they enclose. Rooms facing the sea connect to one another, twisting to the east and west to create a sequence of spaces.

Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Image 23 of 23
Section
Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Koichi Torimura

By manipulating the complexity of interlinked free-form triangles, we freely varied parameters such as the relationship with the landscape, the size of the rooms, and the volume of the spaces. The result is a natural-feeling interior scale and a sense of affinity between the buildings and the site.

Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects - Exterior Photography
© Koichi Torimura

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Cite: "Villa MKZ / Takeshi Hirobe Architects" 10 Apr 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/999141/villa-mkz-takeshi-hirobe-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

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