Birds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP

Birds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - ForestBirds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - Forest, Garden, Deck, PatioBirds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - ForestBirds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - ForestBirds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - More Images+ 3

Atami, Japan
  • Collaboration: Treehouse Creations
  • Main Structure: Steel Three-Dimensional Truss
  • Upper Structure: Timber Framework
  • Foundation: Diamond Pier
  • Site Area: 65,000 m2
  • City: Atami
  • Country: Japan
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Birds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - Forest, Garden, Deck, Patio
© Koji Fuji / Nacasa & Partners Inc

Text description provided by the architects. I am often struck by the nests that crows build using clothes hangers. Hangers are not only durable but also highly elastic, and they offer more hooks to connect than branches and hence are easier to assemble. Crows, flying deftly across the dichotomy of natural and artificial, are creating a functional and comfortable environment.

Plan

When I was thinking about how I would like to make a building like those hanger nests, I received a request from Takashi Kobayashi, a tree house builder. A tea house of 10m2 or less was desired as the showpiece of “RISONARE Atami,” a new athletic zone built by Hoshino Resorts. The host tree was a great camphor tree over 300 years of age, 6m in girth and 22m tall, enshrined in a lush, virgin forest overlooking the ocean. It being a facility for the general public, we thought it should be structurally safe and easy to explain, hence we decided to create an independent building that does not touch the tree in any way.

Birds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - Forest
© Koji Fuji / Nacasa & Partners Inc

The site, however, was a steep slope inaccessible to heavy machineries, and the house itself would have to be established among complexly intertwined branches 10m above ground. Therefore, to enable construction by manpower using light structural members, we chose a composition employing square and hexagonal solid steel rods, 3cm in diameter. Assembling the rods by connecting the surfaces, we constructed a truss held at two points by strong hexagonal bolts. For the foundation, we carefully inserted pier type foundations between the roots in order to avoid the use of concrete and large-scale excavation. Using the structure itself as scaffolding, we assembled it by avoiding the branches as birds create their nest, adding or taking out components based on structural analysis. We mortared the room interior to be like a swallow’s nest. The design leaves open the possibility for visitors to experience nest building by picking up branches from the mountain side and fitting them into walls inside. The exterior appearance and interior space have a gentle and comfortable atmosphere reflecting the bodily scale of the builders.

Section

It is architecture assembled by intertwining components small enough to carry. The architecture can adapt flexibly to the tree form (as opposed to “site form”) and melts into the forest crowded with dark branches.

Birds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP - Forest
© Koji Fuji / Nacasa & Partners Inc

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Cite: "Birds's Nest Atami / Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP" 21 Dec 2017. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/885670/birdss-nest-atami-hiroshi-nakamura-and-nap> ISSN 0719-8884

© Koji Fuji / Nacasa & Partners Inc

热海亲子空间,以乌鸦鸟巢为灵感的森林茶屋 / 中村拓志建筑事务所

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