riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

©Kei Sugino

riverside villa

riverside villa

riverside villa

riverside villa

riverside villa

riverside villa

riverside villa

Location: Shogoin, Kyoto, Japan

Architect: atelier Boronski

Client: private

Material: Steel

Design date: 2016

Completion date: 2017

Site area: 120m2

Built area: 275m2

Architects: Peter Boronski

Architecture Studio: atelier BORONSKI

Photographer: Kei Sugino

Construction Team: Junya Nagimuro

ِِDesign team: Shoma Takeda, Yuhei Yokota, Machi Ikuta

Story:

Text provided by the architects:

On a typically small site wedged between the road and the river, this house in Kyoto is a kind of European canal-house in Japan. It is close to the city center but in a quiet street near cafes and restaurants, bakeries and a chocolatier. The museum district (with temples and shrines) is a short walk, and there are many cherry trees lining these streets.

The well-traveled clients have stayed in various accommodation in many different parts of the world. This is an uncomplicated and robust second house that is easy to live in and easy to look after. After several permutations, the clients decided on a very restrained and rectilinear composition.

The first floor is mostly the guest area, the second floor has the main bedroom area and the third floor has the Living / Dining area in one large open volume with glazing at both ends. The glazed roof-hatch opens to the roof garden above…From the street, there is a private courtyard behind the broad timber gates, landscaped with young and old trees. The fireproof timber siding has been stained individually to create an elegant but understated street facade, contrasted with the galvanized steelwork.

The interior is stripped back and low-maintenance, masculine. The ceilings are exposed steel form-work, the floors are exposed to concrete as are the benches and basins. The stairs and handrails are raw steel. Standard elements of the ‘domestic cosmetic’ are absent. The bathrooms are glazed, and the North facade (facing the river) is all glass - privacy is not so sacred in this house. The artworks are painted straight on the walls (and windows) by local artists commissioned directly by the client. They loved the idea of 21st-century cave drawings. This was a kind of turn-key project for the foreign clients, with the architects handling all the various details such as helping to select and buy the site, setting up accounts for utilities, buying whiteware and furniture, etc. (The clients actually said it was easier for them to build in Japan than in California...)

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