The architecture studio Takuya Hosokai has designed the Niigata I housing complex, consisting of 56 houses, in the city of Niigata, in Japan, near the central station of a fully motorized city, where the use of private transport predominates to be able to move.

This last conditioner begins to give answers to the architects about the final solution, starting with prioritizing the use of piloti to maximize circulation and space in the parking area, in addition to serving as a structure for the building itself, thus generating a greater versatility in spaces.
The Niigata I housing complex, designed by Takuya Hosokai, has a great influence on Japanese Noh art, which consists of the use of partial masks, apparently neutral but with a great emotional transmission thanks to movement and light play.

This art is reflected in the building which rises as a great neutral mass in which continuous glass panes are embedded that give the volume a constant connection with its surroundings, creating a sensation of depth and permeability through reflection and the phenomena caused. by the light projected on it, according to the weather or the season.
 

Description of project by Takuya Hosokai

Noh, a traditional, Japanese performance art, serves as the main inspiration for the architectural concept. The performance of Noh is heavily reliant upon the use of delicately carved masks. Although at first these masks may appear to present a neutral expression they are formed in such a way as to convey a broad emotional spectrum. Through subtle changes in the actor’s movement and variances in lighting the masks are brought to life. A similar dialogue exists between built form and seasonal and daily changes to the sun’s altitude, weather patterns and fluctuations in atmospheric conditions. This temporal cycle conspires to continuously transform and direct light and shadows, generating a form of architectural expression. 

This is a 56 dwelling housing complex located in Niigata, Japan. It sits along a main road, close to the central station and at the end of a busy T-junction. Due to its scale Niigata is a typical motorized society. It lacks a metro system and therefore private vehicles are a prevalent mode of transport. In response, we utilised piloti as a means to maximise the number of parking spaces. The piloti serve a dual purpose; not only adopted by the architectural plan they also contribute to the structural stability of the building. 

The configuration of the facade has not been informed by arbitrary decisions but instead determined by the efficiency and practicality of evacuation routes, service piping and to allow for re-use of the formwork, amongst other requirements. The glass, chosen for its thermal properties, reflects the surrounding cityscape and integrates the façade within its environment. The virtual sky, reflected on the glass, creates a sensation of depth and porosity. Combined with the open ground floor this affects the perception of the building’s volume, its mass is reduced as it balances on the slender piloti.

Typically masks cover the entire face to conceal ones personality, to transform oneself into someone else. However, in Noh, masks only partially cover the face thus revealing the jaw of a living man. This human aspect is permitted to further express the age, personality and sensibility of the actors.  In this fashion, the architectural facade exudes the lives of its inhabitants; it is animated by the chaos living within its ordered structure. The personalities incorporated in the architecture will gradually be rewritten and inherited. This architecture will grow with its occupants; the façade, continuously manipulated by natural phenomenon, is a Noh mask which is activated by the changing seasons.

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Architects
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Project team
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Takuya Hosokai.- Takuya Hosokai, Satoshi Hasebe, James Hull. Local Architect - Hirose Architects.- Takeshi Sugisawa, Yoshio Takiguchi, Shinji Nakano.
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Collaborators
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Structure.- Ejiri Engineers. Local Architect.- Hirose Architects.
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Builder
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HIROSE Co., Ltd.
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Area
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Site area.- 827,39 sqm. Building area.- 436,73 sqm. Total floor area.- 2767,32 sqm.
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Dates
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Design.- 01/2012 - 06/2012. Construction.- 07/2012 - 06/2013.
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Location
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Niigata, Japan.
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Photography
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Naomichi Sode.
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TAKUYAHOSOKAI is an architectural atelier in Tokyo, Japan, established by Takuya Hosokai in the fields of art, architectural design, urbanism and cultural analysis in 2005. Takuya is a first class authorized architect in Japan.

He received the Master of Excellence in Architecture in 2005 from Yokohama National University in Japan, and graduated with distinction for exhibiting his thesis project at the 1st International Architectural Biennale Rotterdam as a part of the Tokyo Ring Project in 2003 from the same university. 

From 2008 to 2011 he worked at AMO / OMA Rem Koolhaas and BIG | Bjarke Ingels Group as a senior architect on numerous large scale regional planning projects. During this time he lived in several countries, in the US, South America and Europe, for his research in world life, culture, history, economy, religion and politics.

In 2011 he resided in Madrid, Spain, carrying out studies into radical structural design and innovative materials with Antón García-Abril at Ensamble Studio. For this research he received a grant from Arts and Culture Division Cultural Affairs Department Agency for Cultural Affairs Government of Japan.

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Published on: June 18, 2021
Cite: "Living between masks. Housing Complex Niigata Ⅰ by Takuya Hosokai" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/living-between-masks-housing-complex-niigata-i-takuya-hosokai> ISSN 1139-6415
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