Skip navigation
Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Cube Theory

Karasawa, knee-deep in theory at age 34, developed a concept based on repeated cubes...

Benjamin Budde -- Interior Design, 7/1/2010 5:15:00 PM

Cube Theoryfirm: Yuusuke Karasawa Architects

site: Kimitsu, Japan

 

View Slideshow

 

Vistas of Kanousan, known to Anglophones as Mount Kano, have inspired a century of Japanese master watercolorists, little known in the West, to capture rich green rolling hills disappearing into distant veils of mist. Yuusuke Karasawa has similarly endeavored to get to the essence of this landscape, in the Chiba prefecture's town of Kimitsu. Except his medium was not paint but architecture, more specifically a getaway where a Tokyo family with one teenage child could recharge on weekends, and the husband, an ad exec, could enjoy the numerous golf courses.


Karasawa, knee-deep in theory at age 34, developed a concept based on repeated cubes. The 900-square-foot house, a two-story cube overall, is furthermore divided into four cubes downstairs, a traditional Japanese residential floor plan known as ta-no-ji. It's a configuration derived from the character for rice paddy, a square with a cross in the middle.


Intersecting with the cubes downstairs and the pinwheel layout above are square three-dimen­sional voids: windows, a central skylight, and openings between function areas. The windows and skylight rotate at angles that Yuusuke Karasawa Architects calculated using algorithms based on the site's natural topography. Ditto for the interior openings, which are so large and numerous that they essentially transform the house into one big room.


To emphasize the geometry, Karasawa reduced distractions. The painted steel spiral staircase is extremely slender, with treads ¼ inch thick and a stringer of pipe 1 ¹⁄₁₀ inches in diameter. Oak flooring runs seamlessly from room to room. 


Doors close flush with the 4-inch-thick walls on both sides, yet a narrow gap between the doors and the concealed jambs creates definition. With such mini­mal door treatments, earthquakes often leave behind visual noise in the form of cracks. Karasawa considered that possibility, too, addressing it with custom jambs that move with the walls during tremors.


The corner bathroom packs a tub, sink, and toilet into a tidy 36 square feet. "We presented the bathroom as an object," Karasawa says. The upper half of the front is glass, with a curtain on the inside.


Diagonally downstairs from the bathroom, the open kitchen is likewise basic, with no-nonsense fixtures and fittings. The counter, in oak similar to the flooring, again turns at an angle in sympathy with Karasawa's algorithmic calculations. Although the off-kilter elements at first appear jarring, the eye eventually adapts, and a dynamic harmony reveals itself. 


Having put in time at MVRDV and Shigeru Ban Architects, Karasawa sees himself as combining the computer techniques of the former with the simple volumes of the latter. His use of scientific and mathmatical models to reflect patterns in nature also recalls metabolism, the Japanese architectural movement of the 1960's.

 

Photography by Sergio Pirrone.

Product Sources

JAPAN ENVIROCHEMICALS: STAIN (EXTERIOR).
MARUSEI LIVING: SOFA (LIVING ROOM).
AKASE MOKKOU: TABLE.
LAPALMA: STOOLS (KITCHEN).
CERA TRADING: SINK FITTINGS (KITCHEN), TUB FITTINGS (BATHROOM).
TOTO: CUSTOM TUB (BATHROOM).
ENDO LIGHTING CORP.: RECESSED CEILING FIXTURES.
NIPPON PAINT CO.: PAINT.
GH9 CO.: MEP.
EIGER CO.:
GENERAL CONTRACTOR.
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter
Talkback
Related Content
»MORE

Advertisement
More Content
  • Blogs
  • Photos

Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

View All Blogs RSS
Symphony in Wood

Symphony in Wood

From the Magazine:
Located a few blocks from Boston Common, the 10-story building would have enjoyed phenomenal city views, but it had windows only on its two narrow ends...
+Read this Article
A Machine for Dreaming In

A Machine for Dreaming In

From the Magazine:
Robert Stone's modernist mirage bewitches Joshua Tree, California
+Read the Article
Alice in Babyland

Alice in Babyland

From the Magazine:
Transforming a dreary basement into the Tokyo Baby Cafe entailed a series of visual illusions
+Read the Article

Advertisement
Interior Design & Electrolux Kitchen Design Competition
INTERIOR DESIGN NEWSLETTERS
Sign up to receive our free Designwire newsletters.

read our Privacy Policy here.