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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.

Nerima House in Tokyo, Japan by Elding Oscarson

 
February 5th, 2017 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Elding Oscarson 

On a plot in Tokyo, a small garden has been thriving next to an old house for a long time. As the tiny existing building was replaced, our client really wanted to preserve the garden and allow it to sprawl all around the house. The small plot should also fit a parking, the maximum footprint of the house, and the necessary gap to the site perimeter. The client is a couple that will first use this house as a weekend house before eventually moving to Tokyo. They also have grown-up children living in Tokyo and abroad that will inhabit the house from time to time. Therefore, the program was fairly unspecified, and rather than making a house with many small rooms, we opted for a concept which gives a few large spaces in this small house.

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

  • Architects: Elding Oscarson [Jonas Elding (Partner in Charge), Johan Oscarson (Partner in Charge), Yuko Maki (Project Architect)]
  • Project: Nerima House
  • Location: Tokyo, Japan
  • Photography: Kenichi Suzuki
  • Software used: Autocad
  • Local Architect: Koichiro Tokimori, Osamu Kato
  • Structural Engineer: Jun Sato Structural Engineering, Yuko Mihara (Project Engineer)
  • Mechanical Engineer: System Design Labo
  • Builder: Kudo Komuten
  • Gardener: Tokuzo
  • Curtain: Akane Moriyama
  • Construction Cost: 38.000.000 yen
  • Site area: 109 m2
  • Building area (gross): 46 m2
  • Total floor area (gross): 99 m2
  • Completion: 2015

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

The ground floor is sunken a bit into the ground to find a new relation in absolute proximity to the garden, a new perspective to contemplate the greenery and an un-traditional openness to the gap around the site. The uninterrupted glass slit around the entire ground floor means that the house is opening up to all sides, to wide and narrow garden spaces, as well as to the street. Due to the semi-sunken base of the house, the second floor can be a singular open space with a proportionally large ceiling height within the maximum building height; still in relative proximity to the ground, not losing contact with the greenery of the garden while giving access to the roof terrace as well. This big second floor room is open to all sides with a glass slit, providing a sense of being semi-outdoor, enjoying a 360-degree panorama of the site, the tree-tops, and the sky.

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Kenichi Suzuki

Image Courtesy © Elding Oscarson

Image Courtesy © Elding Oscarson

Image Courtesy © Elding Oscarson

Image Courtesy © Elding Oscarson

Image Courtesy © Elding Oscarson

Image Courtesy © Elding Oscarson

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Categories: Autocad, House, Residential




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