"Fushi" is an auberge limited to one group per day, nestled deep in the Akigawa Valley on the western edge of Tokyo. The building overlooks the confluence of the Akigawa and Bonbori Rivers. To the west is Mount Joyama, a natural mountain fortress carved by clear streams. The site has a unique landscape that could not be achieved by human power. The auberge was founded by a family that has been running Kaiseki-Ryori (Traditional Multi-course meals) restaurants for over half a century.
The building is basically made of timberworks, but the eave is held in place by a steel-framed structure, carefully designed with highly skilled modern engineering. It is a natural form that seeks the wisdom of living in the climate and culture of the Akigawa Valley.
A heroic roof is sensibly integrated into the site. It rises 1.5 meters from the floor, designed to the eye level of the average Japanese. The eave spans 33 meters horizontally without pillars. It invites one to look toward the remarkably clear water stream with one-of-a-kind stone arrangements that can only be achieved by a million years of river erosion. The scenery of the Akigawa Valley unfolded in front of one's eye like a scroll painting.
"Outdoor Living" is found at the heart of the building. It is an expansive outdoor deck covered with deep and low eaves, with a scroll of the Akigawa Valley landscape in front, the bamboo grove courtyard in the background, and a gentle breeze flowing through the building, fully embodying the essence of the site. Hence, the auberge is named "Fushi" (Figure of Wind), borrowed from Noh Master Zeami Motokiyo's text "Fushikaden" (The Transmission of the Flower of Acting Style). This place can also be a Noh stage, too, without a wall or pillar to define its boundaries. It changes its "setting" according to the seasons. Rain and snow also become part of the atmosphere.
The walls are made of over 20 thousand cedar wood strips, sized 19mm, aligned in parallel with a one-millimeter gap between them. The exterior walls are made vertically in the direction of the rainfall; the interior walls are made horizontally in the direction of the breeze flow. Not a single nail is visible from the surface.
There are two original fusuma paintings on two sides of a sliding screen, Dawn and Evening. Dawn is the faint glow of the moment before the sun rises, while Evening is tinted with the foreboding hues of the moment before the night falls.
Recent discussions of architecture have shifted from thinking of architecture as an "object" to an "experience." However, the history of architecture is almost as long as the history of mankind, it is impossible to explain the qualities of architecture through experience and theory alone. This project reveals the intangible elements of architecture, realising the balance between experiential satisfaction and physical integrity. Experience of beauty and sublimity of architecture permeated the cuisines, ceramics, flowers, Noh, and gardens as a whole.
- 项目设计:Tezuka Architects
- 项目面积: 349.0m²
- 项目年份:2024
- 项目摄影:Kida Katsushida, FOTOTECA
- 首席建筑师:Takaharu Tezuka, Yui Tezuka, Keiji Yabe
- Category: Hotels
- Project 项目设计:Sockkee Ooi, Yoshiki Ono
- Structural Design: Ohno JAPAN / Hirofumi Ohno, Ryuhei Fujita
- Lighting Design: Bonbori Lighting Architect & Associates / Masahide Kakudate, Sachiho Kurokawa
- 景观设计: TEN-KEI / Keiichi Ishikawa
- 项目承包商: Suiga Ltd. / Koji Tashiro, Nishide Keisuke, Matsui Miho, Ikezawa Kunihiro
- 项目成市: Akiruno
- 项目国家: Japan
- 转载自:Archdaily
- 设计师:Tezuka Architects
- 图片©Tezuka Architects
- 语言:英语
- 编辑:序赞网
- 阅读原文
|