Architecture and adaptation go hand in hand - many of the types and
styles of buildings created in the past will not translate into our
current design discourse. Only when architects acknowledges the world
around us is changing, becoming more complex, can they successfully
create functional space.
Japan's NKS architects design
buildings that re-frame space - adapt to changes in their surroundings.
The small wooden Onigiri House in the countryside of southern Japan was
built for an older couple in attempt to keep costs down whilst
maximising space.
The house's main structure forms a triangular tube-shape and is made
from thick cedar boards, traditionally used for ship scaffolding.
Windows are spaced along the top where the boards lean together as well
as in intervals along the base of the house. Additional glass doors
within a glass frame fill the end of the tube. An obvious connection to
nature is essential to most Japanese architects - and here the
placement of windows and doors allows light and wind to penetrate the
entire space. By Andrew J Wiener