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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.

Transustainable House in Tokyo, Japan by SUGAWARADAISUKE

 
August 22nd, 2014 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: SUGAWARADAISUKE

Built in the residential area of Tokyo, ‘ Transustainable House ‘ aims to respond to the 4 features of urban housing.

  • ‘Small building site’ – Extension of perceptional spaces beyond the limit
  •  ‘Diverse style of living’ – Composition of spaces that allow arrangements
  • ‘Endlessly updating townscape’ – Surface that engraves the microclimate
  • ‘Artificial thermal environment’ – Diverse thermal environment that offer choices
Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

  • Architects: SUGAWARADAISUKE
  • Project: Transustainable House
  • Location: Tokyo, Japan
  • Photography: JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT
  • Concept Design: SUGAWARADAISUKE (Daisuke Sugawara, Noriyuki Ueakasaka, Hiroshi Narahara)
  • Schematic Design: SUGAWARADAISUKE (Daisuke Sugawara, Noriyuki Ueakasaka, Hiroshi Narahara)
  • Design Development: SUGAWARADAISUKE (Daisuke Sugawara, Noriyuki Ueakasaka, Hiroshi Narahara)
  • Design Corporation for DD drawings: Yuko Hiura, Chihiro Kotaka, Masayuki Harada
  • Structural Design: RGB Structure (Masayuki Takada)
  • Lighting Design: TOH design (Aki Hayakawa)
  • Plantation Design: GA Yamazaki
  • Plaster Work: Nurikan
  • Construction: Sou Kenchiku Co.,Ltd.
  • Structure: Wood
  • Site area: 100.08 sqm
  • Building area: 38.62 sqm
  • Gross Floor area: 76.30 sqm
  • Height: 6.87m
  • Number of stories: 2
  • Design Period: Apr. 2012 – Apr. 2013
  • Construction Period: May 2013 – Feb 2014

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

These procedures make interior and exterior durable to different contexts of the site. The interior responds to transitions of residents’ lifestyles, while the exterior responds to the transitions surrounding the site. This house is not brought to perfection in the moments of the completion, but targets to enrich the quality of the environment by being intimate with the long lapse of time. This project shows a new solution for sustainable architecture that metamorphoses its existence over the time.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

In Tokyo, it is quite typical for a house to be built on a very small site. Therefore, in order to maximize the limited dwelling space, this house expands the dwelling space both inside and outside, and converts the entire site into a group of spaces with different qualities.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Private rooms are placed diagonally in the site, while common areas are created between them, transforming the rest of the site into ‘semi-indoor’ residential area. The ‘semi-indoor’ areas extend the resident’s spatial perception beyond the site boundary over the enclosed semi-transparent walls.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Today, city citizens migrate between cites constantly. These nomadic style leads to the diversification of family structure and the relationship between family members/housemates.

The group of private rooms and common areas in this residence responds to this issue as well, by allowing free arrangement of spaces. The following diagram shows how residential areas in this house could be managed according to 3 families’ life circles.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Currently, there are 50,000 individual houses in Japan. If this method is applied to all of them, parts of those private houses can be opened to not only urban nomadic residents but also to the community. This method is potential to play a major role in the society as a stock of closed private dwelling spaces.

Architecture cannot exist without giving any influence to the surrounding context. This project explores the possibility to have a unique appearance by having a strong relationship with the context.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

If this is subjected to the neighborhood residences, the relation keeps collapsing every few years because of the scrap-and-build townscape of Tokyo. Therefore, this house relies on the site-specific micro-climate. This aim is realized by the exterior surfaces with unique iron-powder-mixed-plaster and the expanded metal. Exposed to the rain, wind, and sunlight, the weathering of the surface proceed dappled rust on the surface, memorizing the vernacular micro-climate over the time. The architectural appearance is not designed by an architect, but is defined by the actual behavior of the natural phenomena.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Thermal environment in urban areas tend to be a simple choice between the artificially controlled indoor, and the rest of the uncontrolled outdoor. In this house, the artificial and the natural are blended in gradient, which produce diverse choices to be made by the thermal perception of the residents.
This house offers 4 types of approach to the air condition – high controlled indoor, mid-controlled indoor, mid-controlled outdoor and natural condition outdoor. Those 4 approaches create countless thermal condition in between, not only because of the changes of season but also by the use of mechanical air conditioning and windows/doors, and stimulate the residents to search perceptively for the adequate places each time.

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © JÉRÉMIE SOUTEYRAT

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy ©  SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy ©  SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy ©  SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy ©  SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy ©  SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy ©  SUGAWARADAISUKE

Image Courtesy © SUGAWARADAISUKE

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Category: House




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