House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects

House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Interior Photography, Shelving, WindowsHouse NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Interior Photography, WindowsHouse NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Interior Photography, Windows, FacadeHouse NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Exterior Photography, WindowsHouse NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - More Images+ 7

Text description provided by the architects. You may remember Sou Fujimoto Architects radical House NA from this video we shared with you last November. Designed for a young couple in a quiet Tokyo neighborhood, the 914 square-foot transparent house contrasts the typical concrete block walls seen in most of Japan’s dense residential areas. Associated with the concept of living within a tree, the spacious interior is comprised of 21 individual floor plates, all situated at various heights, that satisfy the clients desire to live as nomads within their own home.

House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Image 11 of 12
plan 01

Continue after the break for more images and information on House NA.

House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Iwan Baan

Described as “a unity of separation and coherence”, the house acts as both a single room and a collection of rooms. The loosely defined program and the individual floor plates create a setting for a range of activities that can take place at different scales. The house provides spaces of intimacy if two individuals choose to be close, while also accommodating for a group of guests by distributing people across the house.

Sou Fujimoto states, “The intriguing point of a tree is that these places are not hermetically isolated but are connected to one another in its unique relativity. To hear one's voice from across and above, hopping over to another branch, a discussion taking place across branches by members from separate branches. These are some of the moments of richness encountered through such spatially dense living.”

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elevation 01

Ranging in size from 21 to 81 square-feet, each floor plate is linked by a variety of stairs and ladders, including short runs of fixed and movable steps. Stratifying floor plates in a furniture-like scale allows the structure to serve many types of functions, such as providing for circulation, seating and workings spaces.

House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Interior Photography, Windows
© Iwan Baan

The short-spans allow for the thinness of the white steel frame. Complemented by the thin white-tinted birch flooring, many wonder where the utilities are hidden. Some floor plates are equipped with in-floor heating to help during the winter months, while strategically placed fenestration maximizes air flow and provides the only source of ventilation and cooling during summer.

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diagram 01

The HVAC and plumbing equipment, as well as storage and lateral bracing are located in the thick, north-facing wall at the rear of the house. Additional lateral bracing is provided by a full-height bookshelf and lightweight concrete panels integrated within the side elevations.

Additionally, curtains were installed to provide temporary partitions that address the concern for privacy and separation.

House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Interior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Iwan Baan

Sou Fujimoto states, “The white steel-frame structure itself shares no resemblance to a tree. Yet the life lived and the moments experienced in this space is a contemporary adaptation of the richness once experienced by the ancient predecessors from the time when they inhabited trees. Such is an existence between city, architecture, furniture and the body, and is equally between nature and artificiality.”

House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects - Interior Photography, Shelving, Windows
© Iwan Baan

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About this office
Cite: "House NA / Sou Fujimoto Architects" 30 Apr 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/230533/house-na-sou-fujimoto-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

© Iwan Baan

NA 住宅 / 藤本壮介

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