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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.

Fujigaoka T in Kanagawa, Japan by ChikaraOhno / sinato

 
January 2nd, 2015 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: ChikaraOhno / sinato

This project is a home for a family of three in one unit of a twenty-six year old apartment building.

Although the previous ceiling height was a uniform 2450mm, after checking the structural drawings we realized that the existing height was the minimum required due to the placement of a services pit above, with the slab actually much higher in places, so we proceeded in planning the layout considering this height.

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

  • Architects: ChikaraOhno / sinato
  • Project: Fujigaoka T
  • Location: Fujigaoka, Kanagawa, Japan
  • Photography: Toshiyuki Yano
  • Software used: Vectorworks on Mac
  • Area: 68.2 sqm
  • Client: individual
  • Completion: 03/2014

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

The overall plan is decided by the position of the high-ceiling areas.

As a result, in a part of the living space we were able to make another floor level, the bottom part a bedroom with 2000mm ceiling height and a free space with 1400mm ceiling height above that.

The bedroom space below is divided by a wall formed between the new columns with both sleeping spaces open to the adjacent hall.

In the hall, a common work desk and closet are provided, and are directly accessible from both bedrooms.

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

The halves of the bedroom opening directly onto the adjacent hall is linked by this space, becoming one room, while the deeper half of the bedroom is fully separated into two rooms by the wall.

The free space above is also connected to the hall by an opening gap at foot-level.

Deep in the elevated free space, the floor is interrupted before it joins the exterior wall, creating a small void for air movement from the window in the room below.

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

We are hoping that the space connected by this strange shaped plan and section can function as an environment that accepts the various distances of the family’s everyday life.

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © Toshiyuki Yano

Image Courtesy © ChikaraOhno / sinato

Image Courtesy © ChikaraOhno / sinato

Image Courtesy © ChikaraOhno / sinato

Image Courtesy © ChikaraOhno / sinato

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Categories: House, Renovation, Vectorworks




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