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At One with the Outdoors

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At One with the Outdoors

March 28, 2012

Architect Takeshi Hosaka created a house that is fittingly named Outside In; it is a very modern expression of the traditional Japanese ideal of having a harmonious relationship with nature.

Hosaka’s clients, a couple and their three children, wanted to integrate nature into their one-story home in Yamanashi, Japan. The architect designed a saw-toothed roof created by concrete V-beams, resulting in one big space that is divided into a series of zones that progress naturally from public to private. The communal spaces open to the outdoors through a wall of glass sliders, while the rest of the house receives natural light through the skylights at the peaks of the V-beams, heightening the drama of the changing light throughout the day.

Photography by Koji Fujii/Nacasa & Partners Inc.

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Above: The house features board-formed concrete.

At One with the Outdoors portrait 6
Above: The garden has been brought into the house.

At One with the Outdoors portrait 6
Above: Entering through skylights, the light changes throughout the day.

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Above: The kitchen’s spare forms have a sculptural simplicity.

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Above: The bedrooms are organized like bunks.

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Above: The continuous space, unbroken by dividing walls, allows a view of the garden from the back bedrooms.

At One with the Outdoors portrait 6
Above: A view of the saw-toothed roof from the outside.

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