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House in Shimogamo
Toshiyuki Yano

House in Shimogamo

This is a plan for a house in Shimogamo, Kyoto. The site is located to the west of the Kamo River, with views of Mount Hiei to the east. The surrounding area is a mixture of traditional townhouses and relatively spacious mansions surrounded by walls and hedges, and in recent years the area is being rebuilt with three-story buildings due to the need for efficient land use. This project was also based on the premise of responding to the high level of land use and the landscape with a long history that is being renewed.

photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano
photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano

I was deeply impressed by the landscape of this place, where roofs of various ages and sizes overlapped each other and blended into the mountainous landscape in the background, in an environment where townhouses, mansions and modern buildings are mixed, together.

photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano
photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano

Therefore, I wanted to find a way for the architecture to connect to and amplify this diverse landscape of overlapping roofs. It is not a volume stacked under a large roof, but a collection of small roofs. The volume, which is growing due to the high use of land, is loosened by the division of several roofs, and blended into the town. Under each roof, a unique space is created, and at the same time, the relationship between them appears.

photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano
photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano

Specifically, on the first floor, a tea ceremony room, a children's room, and “doma”, earthen floor, facing the street are arranged with their own roofs, and the tea ceremony room is connected to the terrace on the second floor, while the children's room and doma are connected to the dining room and terrace, and so on. On the second and third floors, the dining room, living room, terrace, and the observation room on the top floor are all connected to each other through the roofs, allowing light and wind to flow in, expanding the air volume, and creating a grain of living space that can be spent individually, or as a whole.

photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano
photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano

In this way, the grains of space characterized by the roof collide, melt, and overlap with each other, aiming to create a residence with a variety of places to live and a comfortable relationship between them.

photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano
photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano

Team:
Architect: Tomohiro Hata Architect & Associates
Structural engineer(s): Takashi Manda Structural Design
Landscape architect(s): Sone Zoen Co.,Ltd.
General contractor: ArthomeCo.,Ltd
Photography: Toshiyuki Yano

photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano
photo_credit Toshiyuki Yano
Toshiyuki Yano

Material Used:
1. Facade cladding: Wood cladding, larch planking (Worldfrontier co.,ltd.)
2. Flooring: Wood flooring, chestnuts flooring (Worldfrontier co.,ltd.)
3. Windows: Roof window, sky-view-series (velux)
4. Roofing: Galvanized roofing sheet, Kiwami-max (JFE steel)

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Project credits

Arquitectos Paisajistas
Structural engineer
Fotógrafos

Product spec sheet

Windows: Roof window
Sky-view series by VELUX
Roofing: Galvanized roofing sheet
Kiwami-max by JFE Steel
Facade cladding: Wood cladding, larch planking, Flooring: Wood flooring, chestnuts flooring

Project data

Año Del Proyecto
2021
Categoría
Casas Privadas
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