T-House by Atelier Boronski
Atelier Boronski have designed the T-House in Kyoto, Japan.

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T-House by Atelier Boronski
On a small hill overlooking Kyoto city a suburban house for a young couple negotiates some tough local design regulations. There is virtually no choice for the roof and eaves, the walls must be straight and vertical, and the top-lights can be no more than 2% of the total roof area (in a country famous for small dark houses). The choice of acceptable siding materials is limited, and so are their colors (even for the window frames) etc, etc. But long-run metal siding with a timber ‘look’ print is acceptable…… Given Kyoto’s remarkable history of quality, creativity and inventiveness to preserve it with a dumbed down ‘pattern language’ is like putting it in a killing jar. Some parts of the inner city (such as Gion) are absolutely historical and warrant clear strong design regulation to manage their preservation but many of the areas affected by stringent design regulations are actually suburban, recently built and with no direct historical connection. Much of Japan has a lenient attitude to design regulation but not Kyoto, the irony is that here it is killing the very spirit that made Kyoto the remarkable place it is.
Therefore the house is conceived of as a simple container with private spaces lodged almost randomly within. But with views in all directions the randomness is orchestrated.
There are three primary elements at work in this composition. The main external walls (running east/west), the private volumes (overlapping and bridging) and the resultant void space extending above the LDK
The main Living, Dining, Kitchen area on the first floor opens onto the main terrace facing the garden to the east allowing classical indoor/outdoor living, and the ceiling height in this area varies from 2.5m to 7.5m. As you move through this area can you clearly perceive the three primary elements.
The two main bedrooms bridge the building, and their north/south facing walls of glass allow the external cladding to continue into the rooms, one white plaster, one black timber) The bathroom on the second floor has a large internal window overlooking the garden to the east and the guest bedroom on the third floor pushes straight out to the west. Beside and below this bedroom are two minor terraces that spatially overlap. The second lounge area on the third floor is just a floor slab, a viewing platform that bridges the main void and allows sweeping views of the city to the east. There are also two top-lights allowing vertical views to the sky. Externally the house is clad in traditional materials of burnt cedar boards (with clear lacquer finish) and white plaster. The garage door facing the street (to the west) is fully camouflaged as a wall of horizontal louvers that continues up to form the railing for the second floor terrace.
But it is the fluidity of the resultant void spaces and the curved connecting stairways that finally let the house go free. It is best understood not from one ideal position but rather as you move through the composition. There are many different kinds of spaces and connections in this house that work to create an extremely ‘socialized’ kind of environment.
Visit the Atelier Boronski website – here.
Photography by Kei Sugino
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Zero34 on 18 Nov 2010 at 10:33 am #
i LOVE the exterior of the house, infact, my first thought was “THIS IS GONNA BE GREAT!!!”
and then I saw the 18 pictures of the stairs and thought “this is an utterly USELESS house”
the interiors do NO justice to the exterior, it’s painful to look at it, especially since it’s empty! There’s ZERO sense of living to this space, ZERO sense of any life, even if you try to imagine furniture. It’s painful, i’m sorry to say. Rather unfortunate since the exterior has so much to offer.
Miss Honey on 18 Nov 2010 at 12:05 pm #
Beautiful project, no doubt about it. The stairs add so much personality and elegance to this house. However, they shouldn’t let children use the stairs, it’s not safe for them.
dino on 18 Nov 2010 at 5:09 pm #
Very nice composition! Fantastic!
NB on 18 Nov 2010 at 6:32 pm #
Wow!
Great design. I love stairs. Beautiful.
g1nchy on 18 Nov 2010 at 7:20 pm #
love the space within created by the random layout of living spaces within the formal regulated exterior. kids should be allowed to jump of the stairs, maybe onto a jumping castle below
Kent on 18 Nov 2010 at 7:33 pm #
I must agree with Zero34. The interior is so cool–in every sense of the word–that it is impossible to imagine living in it. That being said, the house is a thing of beauty and elegance that can be appreciated in the way that a sculpture can be appreciated. One cannot live in a sculpture though.
aditya on 18 Nov 2010 at 9:38 pm #
Agree with Kent. Sculptural enough for exterior and interior, especially the stair (although i think its not safe for family activity). But its feel empty here and there.
Brad on 18 Nov 2010 at 9:39 pm #
@Zero34–I had the opposite response! When I saw the outside, I thought, “it looks ok, like a lot of other new houses I’ve seen…” and when I saw the pics of the staircase I changed my mind. Granted, the 18 photos of it are excessive; but it is fantastic.
I agree it is cold, but I think if the floors were changed to wood the house would feel warmer. I think concrete walls can work if there are warm elements around.
As for the layout, it seems like it will work. I don’t really get a sense of how the spaces flow from the diagrams (and that may be a bad thing) but it seems livable–enough for a modern home, I guess.
(Try imagining the house with wood floors, and I think you will be able to imagine furniture and a much more livable space in general.)
Brad on 18 Nov 2010 at 9:45 pm #
Yeah I lied. I went back and looked at the diagrams more closely—the spaces are nonsensical. There is no reason to arrange things like that unless you have a great staircase you want to show off…hopefully the family can make it work.
Stopat on 19 Nov 2010 at 2:26 am #
Fluid. Fabulous details. It does take a while to understand – so must be a gem to experience.
Colwyn Bay Home Design on 19 Nov 2010 at 8:05 am #
Love the exterior but found the interior to be cold. The stairs appear very artistic but not very safe or functional. The big question…. does the client like it? If the answer is yes then the project is a success.
kelly dm on 19 Nov 2010 at 9:26 am #
Its all about the stairs and they are great. Considering the final product was photographed with out funiture and art work I would cut the Architect some slack. This house is a work of art in itself.
I'm Turning Japanese on 19 Nov 2010 at 11:48 am #
I could live in this sculpture very easily! There are enough indoor/outdoor lounging areas to make this a comfortable home. I’m glad that they did not put a glass booth in the middle of the living room and call it a bathroom. The bedrooms are spacious and have wonderful views and the interiors are well lit with outside light. Fantastic job, Atelier Boronski!
Maira Evans on 19 Nov 2010 at 1:48 pm #
It’s definitely all about the stairs, which are great, but I have very mixed feelings about the interior of this house. It doesn’t seem to be a very livable house, rather a work of art to be exhibited. Thus, I don’t know which category it falls into. Brilliant and brave trial, nonetheless.
TW on 19 Nov 2010 at 2:41 pm #
This is the most ridiculous house. Was it designed by someone who has never lived in a house before??
That staircase is visually clumsy and completely unsafe. The lack of balustrade is obviously dumb. And there is no available handrail AT ALL for the first 4-5 treads.
And the bath? Hello?? Water + Tiles = Slip. So what do they do? Give the bath a ledge so you can’t step straight into it and give that ledge a nice curve to the floor. Which means you would have to step on a wet curved floor getting out of the bath. And then, just in case you need another way to kill yourself, they put the shower next to the bath so even the shower has a unacceptable curved floor on one edge.
I can’t wait to see how this family is going to change the lightbulbs on their pendant at the top rung of the staircase or in the tube lights of the double height spaces and on the walls.
TW on 19 Nov 2010 at 2:46 pm #
And why the big whinge about Kyotos planning regulations for a full first paragraph? Get over it.
The best houses are designed when the architect faces adversity – challenging projects separate the brilliant architects from the average ones.
Yes Kyoto has odd regulations. It also has some of the best architecture and the most brilliant interior design in the world done by architects who found solutions and managed to design something out of the ordinary.
Kim mawdsley on 19 Nov 2010 at 2:59 pm #
The designers (blurb) expose explains why the exterior is so suburban! However the interior is quite beautiful. Yes the stair is quite special but lets look at the finish on the concrete – wow, the controlled use of materials the manipulation of volumes. A work of genius, maybe not, but I would be proud of such and elegant solution to a very restrictive brief.
George F. Turner Terra Preta on 20 Nov 2010 at 6:07 am #
I try to appreciate expression in achitecture. The exterior photo also had me anticipating an interior on the same level. This architect is probably young and has yet to filter his/her own vocabulary. All the moves are in and of themselves wonderful, but they are, at least to me, understood more successfully in a drawing than in reality. Fantastic as the composition is,carful design editing is missing. Eyes are a great organ but no one wants more than two per face.
Hessen on 20 Nov 2010 at 11:09 am #
TW makes a very good point about the curve on the side of the bath. Why was it even considered?? However the rest of the post is nonsense! Like asking have you ever lived in a home, or finding a shower/bath combination out of place in Japan (very normal for this culture.) The designer and client have in their own way responded creativly to the challenges. I think the interior fabulous and very’Kyoto’. Would like to see photos with the house furnished.
Staley on 20 Nov 2010 at 12:12 pm #
I could live here. The space and shapes are inspiring. It seems both complex and minimal.
TX on 21 Nov 2010 at 11:08 pm #
OMG – the tub of death. The sharp edge is a brilliant and inviting accomplice to gravity and water. A little blood red in the bathroom and at the bottom of the stair will soften the stark aesthetic and add a human touch. The exterior looks great though.
KARNO on 22 Nov 2010 at 1:18 am #
The stair and the tub are questionable, but the rest is very nice.
Smack on 22 Nov 2010 at 11:16 am #
There’s only one set of stairs more dangerous than this one at its the ones in scooby doo that turn into a ramp at the flick of a switch. I find the picture of the child hanging off them almost comical. They should have a bottomless pit at the bottom of them just incase anyone makes it that far. I do like the form of them but this is just ludicrous and unsafe design.
Ricardo de A on 26 Nov 2010 at 9:02 am #
Ey! why would you want a practical and “safe” exit to the bath tub?? If you have those stairs, probably the owner is an extreme sports celeb and the bath needs to do justice to that title! Why not a slope for a dampy slide?
maureen on 28 Nov 2010 at 6:27 am #
I actually feel the property is souless, and more approprite as a showcase office rather than a place to live, the exterior is clean and simple, the interior is actually quite depressing, I would find the room that is overhanging the living area near the stairs, a thing that would drive me mad as it seems out of place and takes away the the intended openess of that space, it is the type of building that maybe some young male executive would live in, certainly not a family home im my opinion, dont get me started on the stairs and the safety issues there.