















via Yukiharu Suzuki & Associates
Who: Yukiharu Suzuki
What: Workshop and residence
Where: Hamamatsu City, Shizuoka Prefecture
When: 2007
How: Three-story wood frame and reinforced concrete construction
















via Yukiharu Suzuki & Associates
Who: Yukiharu Suzuki
What: Workshop and residence
Where: Hamamatsu City, Shizuoka Prefecture
When: 2007
How: Three-story wood frame and reinforced concrete construction
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Ana, Joseph Sandy. Joseph Sandy said: awesome – http://whatwedoissecret.org/madebyblog/2009/11/sukiya/ [...]
[...] Source: What we do is secret [...]
[...] via what we do is secret [...]
[...] What We Do Is Secret has a bunch of more photos of this beautiful place. If I ever get to live on a mountainside, I’d want to incorporate this into my home design. Share this on TechnoratiStumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUponShare this on RedditShare this on MixxDigg this!Share this on del.icio.usShare this on FacebookTweet This!Submit this to DesignFloat Permalink Comments (0) Tags: balcony, home, house, underground, Yukiharu Suzuki Similar Posts on Doobybrain.com:OUTrial House in Poland [...]
[...] Yukiharu Suzuki designed this residence located in Hamamatsu City, Shizuoka, Japan. The open plan 3-story wood frame and concrete house has an underground balcony with an amazing view. Enjoy the pictures. Via Whatwedoissecret [...]
[...] http://whatwedoissecret.org/madebyblog/2009/11/sukiya/ barn style houses japanese bathroom barn style homes japanese barn style home japanese barn houses [...]
[...] This awesome barn style home design is a unique workshop / home in Hamamatsu City by Japanese architecture firm Yukiharu Suzuki & Associates. This industrial-chic house has a “homey” twist that makes it an inspiring working and living space. This three-storey concrete and wood barn is perched on a hillside with dramatic views of the sea and skyline. From the outside, the home’s unusual slat-style facades allow interior light to permeate out, offering the house a glowing effect. Inside, the house is a vast open-concept space, open to above with exposed wood posts and beams that give it that “workshop” flair. Glass walls line the main floor, flooding interiors with natural light while blurring the boundary between inside and out. Sliding Japanese shoji screens divide the sprawling interior, defining its different living areas. In a twist of the unexpected, this house is topped by gleaming steel shingles. Yukiharu Suzuki & Associatesvia What We Do Is Secret [...]
[...] House, a very modern looking home with a unique underground tunnel that also serves as a balcony. (Link | [...]
I went to a Toyo Ito talk the other day, and his description of japanese architecture as being a beautiful minimalist shell, like a stage, into which the performers come alive through ritual reminded me so much of your blog:
I wrote about it on: http://www.millenniumppl.blogspot.com
Love your stuff.
Jack.