The World as Flux, Japanese Spatiality
balancing the landscape
House in Hidaka / Suppose Design Office, p. 54-61
House in Hinomiya / TSC Architects, p. 62-69
House of Spread / FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects, p. 70-75
Nest / UID architects, p. 44-53
Pilotis in a Forest / Go Hasegawa & Associates, p. 36-43
The Outside and the landscape : Japanese Spatial relations / Andrea Giannotti, p. 32-35
Giannotti, Andrea
FORM/Kouichi Kimura Architects
Go Hasegawa & Associates
Suppose Design Office
TSC Architects
UID Architects
text
xx
2011
continuing
eng
43 p.
In Japanese culture there is a strong sense of belonging to a collective community, where everyone has a role in public life beyond the private life. The building of the outside space is therefore the way the singular or particular expression confronts and fits in with the collective field. Especially in the secondary cities, as well as in the large metropolis suburbs, there is a huge amount of private houses, predominant compared to the collective residential buildings or towers. They are the single elements of the community's identity. Considering some examples of recently built houses in various Japanese cities and natural environments, we go through the different approaches about the introduction of the single house in the collective field, as a constructive element of the common space. The Japanese landscape is the result of assembling the units on the canvas of the existing context, both urban and natural; the outside space is the space of relations of the single units, and the subject of this essay is their spatial implications
Arquitectura
xx
ARQUITECTURA DEL PAISAJE - JAPON
ARQUITECTURA DOMESTICA - JAPON
ARQUITECTURA JAPONESA
ARQUITECTURA MODERNA - SIGLO XXI - JAPON
DISEÑO ARQUITECTONICO
C3
Korea : C3 Publishing, 2011
2092-5190
No. 326 (oct. 2011) ; p. 32-75
Arquitectura
CO-UCAC
120912
20230801161118.0
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20120926. 05:07:00 p.m., lcifu
20120926. 05:08:27 p.m., lcifu
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