This new completed modern minimalist japanese residential project is located in Minamimachi, Hiroshima, Japan and was designed by Japanese architects Suppose Design Office. The house is designed with offset floors allowing natural light from above to penetrate each level. The house can can be naturally illuminated while maintaining privacy on a small, crowded plot of land. The interior comprises a series of terraces, each shaped differently according to its intended purpose.
During the process of designing for a small plot of land, there are a lot of times in which the form of the building is steered by legal constraints. If you are thinking of how you can have the most floor space, the outer shape of the building is automatically decided by how the permitted ratio of square footage to property size, so the architectural design comes out of the number of stories built just to increase the floor space.
This building was made to slightly exceed its allotted coverage ratio, so each floor fluctuates in shape. The sections that slide out function as lighting design elements, bringing in the outside environment.
The architects have changed the shape of each floor freely according to its intended purpose and features, turning them into spaces with a sense of distance and perspective, maintaining privacy even in crowded urban areas where housing units are close together, creating a bright, well-lit living space.
By starting the design away from the legal constraints, by designing the way we start to plan, we can have buildings that possess a degree of freedom. Just by changing the bottom line a little, I want to pinpoint the things we’ve overlooked, the elements of richness, and design richness around that subtraction.
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