We present this home so special by Ryue Nishizawa, the tenants must be really happy, because to live surrounded by nature in a dense city is priceless.

Ryue Nishizawa has proposed the new housing project as a private oasis full of nature for two women from the publishing business, a hybrid space in which to live, work, rest, and enjoy the historical environment of the city of Tokyo.

To take advantage of the reduced space on the site, the building grows in height, creating changing terraces and holes that allow the use of natural light on all floors. The structure of vertical concrete slabs allows to leave the plants free, without walls, and the opportunity to incorporate small gardens for each room.
 

Memory of project by Ryue Nishizawa.

This building, in a highly dense district packed with high-rise condominiums and office buildings, is the new home to two women in the editorial business who wish to work and live in this historical environment. They specifically request to include an office, common living space, private room for each, a guest room, and a bathroom. I got an impression that it involves a program that is somewhere between an office, and a residence, or a dormitory. The site is an extremely small rectangle of 8x4 m. To the right, the left, and across the street are large buildings of over 30 m  of height standing with no setback making the site much like a small dark valley surrounded by mountainous construction.

Suspecting that a building with regular frame walls would result in narrowing the already narrow usable space of the site, I looked for a possibility to create a building with alternative method. My final decision of structure consisted of a vertical layer of horizontal slabs to create a building without walls. A garden and a room are distributed as a pair on each floor – every room, whether it is the living room, private room or the bathroom, has a garden of its own so that the residents may go outside to feel the breeze, read a book or cool off in the evening and enjoy an open environment in their daily life.

Each room is smaller than the slab allowing for freedom in determining the relationship between the room and the garden regardless of the floor level. The entirety is a wall-less transparent building designed to provide an environment with maximum sunlight despite the dark site conditions. A delight in life is felt as you ascend the light, well ventilated residence that is nestled in this exceptional location in the dense urban fabric.

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Tokyo, Japan.

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Ryue Nishizawa. Architect. Born in 1966 in Tokyo. In 1990, he graduated from Yokohama Graduate School of Architecture, Yokohama National University, and joined Kazuyo Sejima & Associates. In 1995, he founded a firm named SANAA together with Kazuyo Sejima. He established Office of Ryue Nishizawa in 1997.  In 2001, he was appointed as Assistant Professor at Yokohama Graduate School of Architecture, Yokohama National University (Y-GSA), and has been a Y-GSA Professor since 2010.

His numerous awards include the Golden Lion Award of the 9th International Architecture Exhibition at the 2004 Venice Biennale of Architecture, and the 2010 Pritzker Architecture Prize.

His main works include: International Academy of Media Arts and Sciences (IAMAS) Multimedia Studio*, Weekend House, Dior Omotesando Store*, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa*, Moriyama House, House A, The Glass Pavilion of the Toledo Museum of Art*, Marine Station Naoshima*, Stadttheater Almer (De Kunstlinie)*, New Museum*, Towada Art Center, ROLEX Learning Center*, Teshima Art Museum. * SANAA design collaborated with Kazuyo Sejima.

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Published on: November 15, 2013
Cite: "Garden & House by Ryue Nishizawa" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/garden-house-ryue-nishizawa> ISSN 1139-6415
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