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Snowscape: a little museum responds to its region's often extreme climate.


A strange brown tower can be glimpsed over the tops of the trees of a thick Japanese beech Noun 1. Japanese beech - a beech native to Japan having soft light yellowish-brown wood
Fagus, genus Fagus - beeches

beech, beech tree - any of several large deciduous trees with rounded spreading crowns and smooth grey bark and small sweet edible triangular
 forest up in the Matsunoyama mountains of the Niigata Prefecture in the east of Honshu. It is the symbol (actually look-out) of the local natural history museum, which writhes snake-like through a clearing in the woods, its plan responding to a pattern of existing paths. Tower and snake are made of rusted steel, and the long building has pitched roofs pitched roof
n.
A two-sided sloped roof having a gable at both ends. Also called gable roof.
 that give the complex an air of both the local vernacular ver·nac·u·lar  
n.
1. The standard native language of a country or locality.

2.
a. The everyday language spoken by a people as distinguished from the literary language. See Synonyms at dialect.

b.
 sheds that protect crossroads from snow, or of a long abandoned industrial building. Kyororo (the name comes from the cry of a local kingfisher kingfisher, common name for members of the family Alcedinidae, essentially tropical and subtropical land birds, with affinities to trogons and swifts and related to the hornbill. ) is intended to act as a centre of both scientific study and local interpretation for tourists. Perhaps the most strange quality of the place is that, although in summer, it seems warm and temperate temperate /tem·per·ate/ (tem´per-at) restrained; characterized by moderation; as a temperate bacteriophage, which infects but does not lyse its host.

tem·per·ate
adj.
, winters are very severe, with snowfalls of some 30m a year, and drifts up to 7m high. So in winter, the building (except for the tower) can be almost completely covered in snow. The seamless external skin of welded 6mm rusted steel plates is stiffened against snow loads by a very strong frame of steel I beams. Big panes of acrylic (up to 75mm thick) allow large transparent areas to be made in the skin, giving some internal spaces whole transparent walls. In summer, they offer views out over the rice paddy fields to the buna bu·na  
n.
A synthetic rubber made from the polymerization of butadiene and sodium.



[Originally a trademark.]

Noun 1.
 forest. In winter, with drifts higher than the eaves, visitors enter the building between high walls of snow to find a warm tunnel in which the acrylic panels allow them to look straight out into the structure of the snow and see the creatures that inhabit in·hab·it  
v. in·hab·it·ed, in·hab·it·ing, in·hab·its

v.tr.
1. To live or reside in.

2. To be present in; fill: Old childhood memories inhabit the attic.
 it. From the 34m high tower, the distant Three Mountains of Echigo, one of the most celebrated local landmarks, can be seen on the horizon over the snow-covered forests from a building that is already a landmark itself. A more extensive description of the building and its principles of construction and climate control is to be found in AR August 2004, p40.

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COPYRIGHT 2004 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:9JAPA
Date:Dec 1, 2004
Words:361
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