Wednesday, 6 May 2009

Love House + Love House & Moon by Takeshi Hosaka Architects

Photo above ::Kozo Takayama

Photo above ::Amanda Prior

Photo above ::Nacasa & Partners

LOVE HOUSE is a house located in Kanagawa, Japan designed by Takeshi Hosaka Architects for a couple.
'On a very small site of 33 square meters of frontage 3.3m / 10m deep, I planned a building of frontage 2.7m / about 9m deep. I draw the biggest curve on there with width and depth of a building, I distributed a place of a roof and a place of a sky with the curve. And I planned the stairs which went up from the first floor to the second floor with this curve. The main space of the building which these created, it is it with the space that it "is not indoor, and is not the outdoors.

Sunlight shows the change from early morning to the evening very clearly to this space. This space without a lighting equipment turns into space where the light of some candles and the darkness of night live together. On a rainy day, a rainy curtain appears along a curve of a roof.When it rains, it is not always the same sound. Quiet rain, intense rain, rain with wind ... rain creates various sounds.

Light of the sun and moonlight play in the LOVE HOUSE, and rain and wind visit LOVE HOUSE, and birds and insects visit a tree and a fruit tree of LOVE HOUSE. The situations differ every day. We can know that all nature given on the earth is prepared in very small LOVE HOUSE. A couple chose coexistence with all things to visit LOVE HOUSE and they decided not to put television to enjoy this rich space.

LOVE HOUSE does not separate indoor and the outdoors. I discovered the new space that it "is not indoor, and is not the outdoors". And LOVE HOUSE was made. Our sense and instinct may continue still having the thing which the human felt at the time of the Creation. I have a feeling that LOVE HOUSE can remind us of them.'
- Takeshi Hosaka.

Photo above ::Amanda Prior
Photo above ::Kozo Takayama


Photo above ::Nacasa & Partners
Photo above ::Kozo Takayama
Photo above ::Nacasa & Partners

a+. takeshi hosaka architects via via
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Monday, 4 May 2009

Gallery Monma ANNEX by Akasaka Shinichiro Atelier

Gallery  Monma ANNEX 1
On 8 June 2oo2, ANNEX Monma Gallery opened in Sapporo, a place with rich natural environment. Designed by Shinichiro Akasaka from Akasaka Shinichiro Atelier the art gallery is open between May to October because of the weather in Hokkaido.

Gallery  Monma ANNEX 2Gallery  Monma ANNEX 3Gallery  Monma ANNEX 4
The very white and very tight rectangular hallway for exhibition that leads to an outside terrace in a naturally green environment which is so suitable for an open-air cafe.

'This gallery is different from our work of art as well as the people affected are aware of the visit here of the works on display, as well as the gallery, or left natural, some influence from the surrounding environment response was designed to trigger a rethink things.
This space is a cylinder with no air conditioning as a direct response to the environment.
Time and seasonal visitors will have to design their own action to the weather.
Here we are having the usual fall in the space environment, rather than the environment (work) to meet the people (affected), is the space.
Width 1.6m, height 2.14m, Depth 15m. In this tight space, or how to get what the artists exhibited their works or of the birth of a new or adapted in this space, we hope to present a space beyond the intended use of the designer.'
- Akasaka Shinichiro Atelier, Gallery Monma ANNEX.
Gallery  Monma ANNEX 5Gallery  Monma ANNEX 6Gallery  Monma ANNEX 7The cantilever outside terrace.

a+. gallery monma ANNEX
a+. akasaka shinichiro atelier via world-architects
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'Individual and Collective Experiences of Limits' by Atelier Brückner

Night view- light choreography
This is the night view of light choreography in Expo 02, Biel (CH): "VIV(R)E LES FRONTIÈRES" by Atelier Brückner which is a project of the Swiss border cantons about Bans, Limits, Tabus, Borders.

'The Swiss Border Cantons shed light collectively on borders and limits from a social, psychological, cultural and ethnic perspective. The personal crossing of borders and the individual experience of limits, the collective social impacts of issues from domestic violence to human reproductive cloning are all subjects not easy presentable by conventional means. The highly interpretive presentation at the center of the pavilion and the revolving audio cabinets provide a view into these complex experiences of limits.'
- Atelier Brückner

Prologue- labyrinthine ::pole forestPrologue- labyrinthine ::pole forest

Interior projection- introduction of the charactersInterior projection- introduction of the characters

Interior projection- domestic violenceInterior projection- domestic violence

Interior projection- invalidityInterior projection- invalidity

Interior projection- collective extensive experiencesInterior projection- collective extensive experiences

Interior projection- upside downInterior projection- upside down

a+. atelier brückner
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