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Rumah-Rumah Inspiratif dan Unik dari Jepang

Written By demi anak on Sabtu, 01 Februari 2014 | 19.22



WelcomE






and then, write down your



enjoy




HOUSE = a building in which people, especially a single family, live.

Rumah dapat diartikan sebagai tempat perlindungan untuk menikmati kehidupan, beristirahat dan berinteraksi sesama anggota keluarga.
Di dalam rumah, penghuni memperolah kesan pertama dari kehidupannya di dunia ini.
Rumah yang ideal harus menjamin kepentingan keluarga, yaitu untuk tumbuh, berkembang dan juga bersosialisasi dengan tetangga lainnya.

Bagi beberapa arsitek di Jepang, rumah bukan hanya sekedar tempat tinggal.
Untuk itulah TS mencoba menghadirkan potret rumah-rumah unik di Jepang.
Agan-aganwati boleh coba mengamati keunikannya, mulai dari penggunaan material untuk bangunan, dan bahkan pemilihan warna yang cenderung natural.

Kiranya bisa menjadi inspirasi.





Spoiler for Look Inside The Wooden Light Walls House in Toyokawa, Japan:
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This small home in the town of Toyokawa, Japan is sandwiched between two-story buildings that create shadows over the structure. mA-style Architects solved this darkness problem by opening up the roof so that the beams direct sunlight into the house, lighting up the laminated wood interior with patterns of rays that change throughout the day. The interior is divided up by four boxes accessible via ladders that serve as private rooms, whose space intervals create pathways.


Spoiler for House That Hangs Halfway Above The Yatsugatake Mountain:
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Kidosaki Architects built this house on the edge of the Yatsugatake Mountain in Nagano, Japan to satisfy the commissioner’s desire to enjoy incredible views of the surrounding nature. The architects adhered to traditional Japanese architectural principles and embraced the immediate environment, designing the house in such a way for it to coexist with the mountainscape. Two bracing steel cylinders hold the structure that freely hangs halfway above the edge, which gives occupants an almost 360-degree view.


Spoiler for The Sprawled Box "House O" in Hokkaido, Japan:

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This one-story House O in a small town of Hokkaido, Japan, was strategically planned according to the site’s climate and topographic properties. Unconventional to Japan’s usually dense and narrow architecture, House O is made up of box-like structures that are widely spread out on the unpopulated landscape. The orientation of the boxes are thought out with path circulation in mind, giving the center living room the highest ceiling, with other spaces branching out from it. The pockets of spaces also control the internal temperature during the region’s extreme climates, exposing the many surface sides to sunlight in the winter and aiding in ventilation in the summer. Unlike the all-black exterior, the interior is all white with natural timber, brightening and visually opening the space for the occupants.


Spoiler for The "Beyond The Hill" House in Yokohama With A Public Seating Deck:

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Architect Kazuhiko Kishimoto had the local community in mind for Beyond the Hill, a timber house he built on a steep slope in Yokohama. On the lowest level, wide stairs decline downward along the site, leading to a center courtyard open to the sky. The client, who teaches cooking classes in her kitchen, wanted a home that encouraged public invitation.

The interior is clad in the same timber floors with white walls. A series of small windows create dynamic shadows that pattern the walls, visually changing throughout the day.


Spoiler for The Open House H in Chiba, Japan:

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The all-white, smooth-surface exterior houses an all-wooden interior with Y-shaped frames that visually divide the open space. The architects’ intention was to build a modern home for a small family so that they can more or less always feel where they are inside, hence the riser-less stairs and second-story balconies that look over the ground floor.


Spoiler for The "Pilotes in a Forest" Studio by Go Hasegawa, Tokyo:
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This weekend home by Go Hasegawa is located in a mature tree forest three hours away from Tokyo. Propped over 20 feet above the ground by thin X-shape support frames, the main structure boasts 360-degree views of the surroundings above the tree line. Below, an open plaza is furnished by a humble outdoor wooden table and benches, the square space walled in by the forest that becomes part of the dwelling. Even though this studio looks simple and unsophisticated, it has full plumbing, housing a kitchen and bathroom as well as a bedroom and living room.



Lanjut Di Bawah
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Sumber :http://www.kaskus.co.id/thread/52e29aa418cb178a1f8b4666

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