This Family Home in Japan Breaks the Stereotype of a Modern Farmhouse

A fourth-generation farmer and professional snowboarder builds a fresh take on the style on his grandparents’ land.

The muted grey coloured ceramic cladding enjoys a quiet synergy with its surroundings as it mirrors the silvery bark of the bare trees in winter.

Shinya Momono lives in the same area as his parents and grandparents in the agriculture town of Naganuma in Hokkaido, Japan, where run-of-the-mill pitched-roof structures dot the sparse landscape. He’s a professional snowboarder, but has also followed in the footsteps of his ancestors.

"I am the fourth generation of farmers here," he says. "I used to live with my grandparents in a 50-year-old house. When my wife and I got married, we decided to build a new one and converted the farmland on the side of my parent’s house into residential land."

The small town only has a population of 10,300 and farmland occupies 60 per cent of the area.

Architect Tomoyuki Sudo designed a home for Shinya Momona and his family on his ancestral property to continue their tradition of farming.

Ikuya Sasaki

To create their home, Shinya and his wife, who’s an accountant, engaged architect Tomoyuki Sudo. Wanting to create views of the open field to the south, the couple requested large windows overlooking the landscape. "We both love the outdoors and spend a lot of time outside as farmers, so we wanted a house with a connection to nature," says Shinya. Sudo designed a box-shape home with a bite taken out of one side, creating a crescent shape where windows look over the field.

The shape creates a cozy living space while alluding to the town’s name, 三日月湖, meaning The Crescent Moon Lake. It’s also known as Tanne-To, a name given by the area’s indigenous Ainu people, which translates to a long, narrow swamp.

The use of 300mm-thick, high-performance glass wool for the roof regulates internal temperatures, especially during winters.

The roof’s thick layer of glass wool insulation regulates internal temperatures.

Ikuya Sasaki

Surrounding the house are the homes of the owner's parents and grandparents, as well as buildings used for farming.

The home’s curving walls faces south for an open view over farmland.

Ikuya Sasaki

See the full story on Dwell.com: This Family Home in Japan Breaks the Stereotype of a Modern Farmhouse
Related stories:



from Dwell.com https://ift.tt/9xkBlHj

Comments