"house in Ibara" by Kazunori Fujimoto Architect & Associates
architecture , feature


photo(C)Kazunori Fujimoto
Japanese Hiroshima based Kazunori Fujimoto Architect & Associates completed "house in Ibara" in Okayama, Japan, in 2008







photo(C)Kazunori Fujimoto




The following is a text by the architect.
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This is a small house for a young couple in the country of Okayama.
They left the apartment of the downtown where lived before, and pursued a new house in the natural rich farm village.
They chose leading a life simple and modest in rich nature.
It is a trial which aims at fusion to traditional farm village scenery and a modern life.
Although the Japanese traditional house is followed in respect of a simple life space,this house is considered as the space which develops the spatiality of the standardized Japanese traditional houseand has the more contrast of reliance opening-closing by using strict geometrical composition of modern architecture
This house consists of box-space and roof-space.
There are two bedrooms and bathroom in box-space, and there is storage(23.5 square meters)in an underground story.
In roof-space, there are the entrance,kitchen and living room.The living room continues with the nature through an outside terrace.
The ground floor is space like the one-room of 78.5 square meters.
In order to articulate this small space more attractively, box-space and roof-space are connected carefully.
If the sliding door of a bedroom is opened, all the rooms serve as one room space, and two spaces are gently connected with the level difference reflecting a site slope.
The box-space sets so that the sunshine and the privacy from the outside may be interrupted, and roof-space is allotted in the direction which faces nature.
A parking lot is buried in a site slope by a half ,located at the mountain side.
Zelkova trees are planted in the yard so that sunbeams shining through branches of trees may be dropped on a house.
(Kazunori Fujimoto)
Credit:
Architects: Kazunori Fujimoto Architect & Associates
Location: Okayama,Japan
Construction Year: 2008
Site Area: 1156m2
Constructed Area: 102.05m2





