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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

HA tower in Tokyo, Japan by Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

 
October 12th, 2011 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

After decades of government-backed decentralization urban life is again being promoted in Tokyo, and residential mid-rise and high-rise towers have as a consequence begun to populate the city in large numbers. Collectively the additions form a new normal urban typology that embraces height but unexpectedly denies the surrounding urban landscape in favor of an interior life. Not surprisingly a side effect of this approach is the lack of livable outdoor space in the city center. Balconies are common but purely technical, included primarily as outdoor service zones to be filled with mechanical equipment and the accessories of the emergency escape system. Even the most modest tables and chairs fight for space. For those who wish to have some degree of open outdoor space there is little choice but to leave the city center and settle into a family home in the suburbs.

Images Courtesy Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

  • Architects: Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect
  • Name of Project: HA tower
  • Location: Higashi-Azabu, Tokyo, Japan
  • Team: Paul Mak, Misuzu Yoshikawa
  • Structural Engineering: Alan Burden (structured environment)
  • Status: preliminary design
  • Area: 850 m2
  • Program: Residential tower
  • Credit of Images: Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

Creating a more livable urban typology requires a certain amount of opportunism. In this case we discovered the site had a maximum height that would never be reached simply by stacking floors from the ground up. But if we pulled the floors apart and designed from the top down it was clear that we could create large outside spaces that would extend the living area of the apartments and make a place for residents to literally live in the heights of the city. In this way we are working towards a typology where the city does not stop at the front door but extends into and enlivens the home.

Taking this approach, the change in spacing between the units naturally creates a variety of unit types. On the lower levels, a roof deck connects the living rooms directly to the city; in the middle level a large balcony is carved out along with a mezzanine space; and on the top floors double height units take advantage of the height and views available to them and are literally open to the sky.

Images Courtesy Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

Images Courtesy Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

Images Courtesy Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

Images Courtesy Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

Images Courtesy Frontoffice + François Blanciak Architect

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Categories: FormZ, Rhino, Tower




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