Solarium House / YKAA

Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, WindowsSolarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, WindowsSolarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, WindowsSolarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Stairs, HandrailSolarium House  / YKAA - More Images+ 11

Sapporo, Japan
  • Architects: YKAA
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  50
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Photographs
  • Lead Architects: Atsuki Yamazaki, Maryana Kovalchuk
  • City: Sapporo
  • Country: Japan
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Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Windows
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk

Text description provided by the architects. From the get-go, our simplicity-loving clients, a couple with their three dogs, requested a compact house with a sunroom where everyone could come together. However, the land presented a certain challenge - it is located in a chaotic urban zone with high-rise buildings, landscape company facilities and parking lots with limited natural light. As a result, we started looking into different ways to handle natural light as well as to create an open space in this particular context. In addition, during this process, we realized that it would be important to design a dwelling place with a sense of psychological distance from its surroundings.

Solarium House  / YKAA - Image 10 of 16
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk
Solarium House  / YKAA - Image 15 of 16
Section 01
Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Windows
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk

First of all, we created an open space, hereinafter referred to as the Solarium, with an atrium in the center of the building facing north and south, and ensured the spaciousness of the floor space by adding compact rooms, studios, bathroom and storage on the east and west sides. A translucent material called twin-wall polycarbonate was used on the top of the large windows facing the atrium to create a wall of light that dilutes the chaotic state of the outside while delivering soft, diffused light to the inside. Additionally, we crafted other openings in the walls and ceilings that fully or partially open up to the sky, creating various qualities of light.

Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Windows
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk
Solarium House  / YKAA - Image 13 of 16
Plan - Ground Floor
Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Windows, Table
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk

The installation of polycarbonate panels over the window frames prevents heat loss, enhances insulation, and provides resistance against Hokkaido's cold winters. To maximize space, we have kept each room to a minimum size, and the ceiling and door heights intentionally low. Consequently, the private rooms serve as tranquil and comforting spaces, while on the other hand, the Solarium, with its open double-like ceiling, exudes an even greater sense of openness and expansiveness. Apart from clear horizontal and vertical lines, there are invisible diagonal lines connecting spaces and giving rise to a seamless flow.

Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Windows
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk
Solarium House  / YKAA - Image 14 of 16
Plan - 1st Floor
Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Handrail
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk

In this way, the rooms are designed to enhance the mutual quality of each other's space, creating a sense of continuity that is more like a unified one-room living unit than a simple collection of rooms. Furthermore, this quality offers comfort and privacy, while allowing a subtle awareness of other family members' presence in the house. The Solarium is the heart of the house - it is where everything comes together, from the entrance to the dining room, living room, and staircase. Through careful anticipation of various functions, while at the same time extending their flexibility, we have designed a space with a continuous happenstance. A space where people can live, work and daydream.

Solarium House  / YKAA - Interior Photography, Stairs, Handrail
© Ikuya Sasaki, Maryana Kovalchuk

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Cite: "Solarium House / YKAA" 13 Sep 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1021140/solarium-house-ykaa> ISSN 0719-8884

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