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. Dappled House 4F / Private Lounge in Tokyo, Japan by DDAA and DDAA LABJanuary 22nd, 2020 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: DDAA and DDAA LAB Architects usually have to deal with many conditions given by clients, especially when designing a house, because it directly affects people’s life. They spend large amount of money in building it and then spend many hours in it once it is built. On the contrary, this project involved few conditions given by our client, because this room would be used as his “second home” and “lounge” for private gatherings and he only needed very basic life functions. His only request for us was to design a “place to enjoy good wine with close friends” and a “table made of solid wood.”
Fortunately, the site was formerly a VIP room of a French restaurant and there was a space where a wine cellar had been located. We took it as a starting point and designed a large wine cellar there. The wine cellar is enclosed in glass so that guests sitting at a large solid chestnut dining table can see wine bottles inside. The glass partition is fixed in place using brass battens like a greenhouse. We also designed a bookshelf to be placed near the large dining table so that books may present fun topics for good conversations over wine. The bookshelf consists of a 3 x 3 grid and containing books on wine, cooking and people curated by book director Hiroyuki Yamaguchi (good and Son). A small table is attached to an L-shaped sofa so that guests sitting near the corner can put down their wine glasses there. We also designed a low table to be placed beside the sofa. The glass tabletop is supported with a tensegrity structure made of peeled and dried solid wood branches. In order to enhance the sunny space along the windows (which would otherwise look like an empty corridor), we made a large planter by the windows and planted cacti in response to the client’s request for low-maintenance plants. Contact DDAA and DDAA LAB
Categories: House, Interiors, Lounge, Residential |