Friday, May 13, 2011

Nest by UID Architects


(Unfortunately, the blog was down this morning and I wasn’t able to get in…)
For today’s Your Environment of the Week (Y.E.O.W), we will take a look at the NEST by UID Architects. [PIC HEAVY!]

TGIF!
Today’s Environment of the Week will be Nest by UID Architects Onomichi-city, Hiroshima, apan.Thank you Hannah for today’s YEOW suggestion! 
[If anyone else has any YEOW’s they’d like to share, please feel free to let me know! Thx J]
Project description
Name project: Nest
Architects: UID architects – Keisuke Maeda and Toru Shigehiro
Consultants: Konishi
Structural Engineers: Yasutaka Konishi, Takeshi Kaneko
Structural: K-style – Kouso Katayama
Mechanical: Toshiya Ogino
Environment Design Office: Toshiya Ogino
Masaru Kitamura, landscape
General contractor: Home Co., Ltd.
Masafumi Ichikawa and Akihiro Hosoya
Structural system: reinforced concrete, timber
Used materials: cedar, exterior; concrete, structural plywood, interior
Site area: 362.00

Built area:81.22

Total floor area : 121.45

Date of completion: November, 2010

Japanese studio UID Architects have completed this timber house
at the foot of a mountain in Japan that has wide openings
in the walls and roof, as well as between the ground and first floors.

The entrance to Nest is located on the ground floor
and visitors pass through a planted garden that can grow
up through the full height of the house.




This time we sought a single space that comprehends
the surroundings and the house by rethinking elements
such as floors and walls that make up architecture.
Specifically, in the ground layer some spaces are connected
to each other by a tunnel that becomes a concrete anthill
nest attached with a small entrance on the ground.
Above the ground a floating wooden nest box composed
of things like branches and fallen leaves cover the nest on
the ground’s surface. Although non-sequence composition
of the floors and the walls make the architectural elements
look separated, they will become essentials that link
architecture and the surrounding in succession, when viewing
the environment on the whole.

The house will offer spaces that is similar to the forest’s
comfortable sunshine and shade,
which reside with natural climate. The house will be a nest in a
forest that its territory will not be regulated.

Nest by UID Architects
Onomichi-city, Hiroshima, Japan
This is a small house planned in a forest surrounded by rich nature. The site is located in the foot of a mountain with scarce neighbouring houses in Onomichi City. The family is consisted of two daughters, their mother and their loving cat.
Since there are only three women, we thought it would be appropriate to gently connect a boundary of the place’s environment and architecture, allowing close distance between the family members. It is to seize the environment as non-dividable, similar to creatures that generate their nest under elements that cover forest’s ground. It is like a principle that expands from a nest in a forest, to a forest , then to the earth, and ultimately to the universe.





1 comment:

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