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NAKED HOUSE.


Combining an innovative translucent membrane with a luminous, flexible internal realm populated by movable tatami ta·ta·mi  
n. pl. tatami or ta·ta·mis
Straw matting used as a floor covering especially in a Japanese house.



[Japanese.]
 rooms, Shigeru Ban's latest experimental dwelling is an object lesson in material and spatial invention.

This house in Kawagoe, north of Tokyo, forms part of Shigeru Ban's ongoing series of inventive dwellings. Designed for receptive, adventurous clients (not necessarily with large budgets), each advances a prototypical solution to the challenge of accommodating domestic life.

Here Ban's quest has led him to devise a house with a series of mobile rooms in a single shed-like volume, enclosed by milkily translucent walls. Ban describes it as the 'Naked House'. The site lies in an agricultural area, on the edge of rice paddies, so the house becomes an object in the landscape. The clients are a couple with two children and a live-in grandparent, who were drawn to the idea of a big, warehouse-type dwelling. Inspired by the surrounding greenhouses, Ban sought to devise a translucent yet highly-insulated skin - a modern version of delicate shoji shoji

In Japanese architecture, sliding partition doors and windows made of a latticework wooden frame and covered with a tough, translucent white paper. When closed, they softly diffuse light throughout the house.
 (rice paper) screens. Rejecting shredded paper (sandwiched between corrugated plastic Corrugated plastic, also known under the tradenames of Coroplast, Correx, Corriflute or Twinplast, refers to a wide range of extruded twinwall plastic sheet products produced from high impact polypropylene resin with a similar make up to corrugated fiberboard.  and a textile membrane) as too opaque, his experiments led him to a material more usually used for packaging fruit- extruded white polyethylene 'noodles' that combined the properties of translucence and insulation.

The synthetic noodles noo·dle 1  
n.
A narrow, ribbonlike strip of dried dough, usually made of flour, eggs, and water.



[German Nudel.
 were fireproofed and stuffed into bags made of heat-sealed transparent polyethylene sheeting. Bags were then stapled to the timber frame of the house and concealed on the inside by a layer of nylon attached by Velcro, so the inner membrane The inner membrane is the cell membrane (phospholipid bilayer) of an organelle or Gram-negative bacteria that is within an outer membrane.

In eukaryotic cells, this inner membrane is present within the nuclear envelope, mitochondria and plastids like the chloroplast.
 can be removed for cleaning. A double layer of translucent polycarbonate A category of plastic materials used to make a myriad of products, including CDs and CD-ROMs.  sheeting forms the house's outer skin. This remarkable 15 in thick wall encloses a long, luminous room, glazed at one end. The other end contains fixed storage and kitchen spaces that can be partitioned off with billowing bil·low  
n.
1. A large wave or swell of water.

2. A great swell, surge, or undulating mass, as of smoke or sound.

v. bil·lowed, bil·low·ing, bil·lows

v.intr.
1.
 white curtains.

The lofty room forms a neutral stage set for the balletic machinations of a quartet of movable boxes constructed from paper honeycomb Paper honeycomb is a construction material that resembles papier mache, but with the hexagonal structure of a honeycomb. As such, it is extremely strong for its weight.  panels on timber frames. Each is a traditional Japanese tatami room on wheels, that can be deftly choreographed to create different configurations. The tops of the children's boxes double as play spaces and each box can be moved around to dock with wall-mounted air conditioners, electrical sockets and windows. The family are quite at ease with this somewhat unorthodox arrangement relishing the house's fluid informality.

HOUSE, KAWAGOE, JAPAN

ARCHITECT

SHIGERU BAN Shigeru Ban (坂茂, Ban Shigeru; born 1957 in Tokyo, Japan) is an accomplished Japanese and international architect, most famous for his innovative work with paper  

1 Radiating light, the translucent volume of the house shimmers ethereally on the edge of a paddy field. The simple form retails surrounding local greenhouses.

2 Car port at east end.

3 Long, luminous volume forms a neutral stage set for choreography of movable tatami rooms. Curved trusses are connected to the timber framed walls by slender diagonal steel braces.

4 Boxes glide around the room as if in a domestic ballet. Top of children's boxes doubles as a play area.

HOUSE, KAWAGOE, JAPAN

ARCHITECT

SHIGERU BAN

Architect

Shigeru Ban Architects, Tokyo

Structural engineer

Hoshino
COPYRIGHT 2001 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:CHOW, PHOEBE
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:9JAPA
Date:Oct 1, 2001
Words:490
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