ArchShowcase 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. Wilson House in Chiba, Japan by Klein Dytham architectureApril 25th, 2017 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Klein Dytham architecture Wilson House is a weekend house in a relaxed beachside town in Chiba, an hour and a half by train from Tokyo. The house combines the aspirations of both client and architect – the client wanted the house to have a feeling of real solidity, and Klein Dytham architecture was keen to open the house to its magnificent setting. In meeting these two goals, KDa found inspiration in the wooden platform trays – called sanbo – found in Japan’s Shinto temples. These small trays have a built-in stand, and are used in Shinto rituals to present offerings of food or other special items to the enshrined gods. KDa reinterpreted this form as a building with a solid base – two heavy walls of concrete supporting a concrete tray. Arranged on this tray is the “offering” – a variety of lightweight, wooden-framed boxes.
The entry to the house is from the rear, past a separate volume containing the garage. The concrete walls of the lower level define living, kitchen, and dining spaces, with the wooden structures of the upper level enclosing bedrooms and bathrooms. The entire house is directed towards the river, with large windows opening to the river views and a spacious terrace for barbecues. Between the house and the river is a garden, very large by Japanese standards, which links the house with the greenery of the riverbank. Contact Klein Dytham architecture
Categories: House, Residential |