Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono

FLAT RENOVATION IN SAKURAZAKA

Icada + Masaaki Iwamoto Laboratory

ARCHITECTS
Icada, Masaaki Iwamoto Laboratory

MANUFACTURERS
Modulex

LEAD ARCHITECT
Masaaki Iwamoto

ENERGY CONSULTANTS
Tokyo University Of Science

STRUCTURE
Xyz Structure

CONTRACTOR
Exworks

ENERGY CONSULTANT
Kozo Takase, Tokyo University Of Science

LIGHTING DESIGN
Modulex

AREA
86 M²

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Fukuoka, Japan

CATEGORY
Renovation, Apartment Interiors

The project is a flat renovation of a 30-year-old apartment in Fukuoka City, Japan, a home for myself, my wife and our two children.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono

By using movable bookcases as partitions of the bedrooms, I designed a house where the space expands and contracts as the form of the family changes.

In postwar Japan, Most of the flat units were designed for nuclear families of a parent and children, with the living room, dining room, parents' room, kid room, kitchen, and bathroom squeezed into a small rectangle of around 80 square meters.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono

What you see here is a one-to-one correspondence between the family form and the floor plan.

However, the family grows and changes from moment to moment. Children, who are small now, will establish themselves and leave the house in the not too distant future.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office

It would be reasonable for parents to enjoy the space after children leave, but the fragmented rooms in a conventional flat are too cramped to reuse and usually ends up as storage, filled with dusty cardboard boxes of mementos.

Against this backdrop, the idea was to create a house where the rooms can expand and contract as the family changes.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office

The bedrooms are divided by three movable bookcases, which can be scattered to create four small alcoves, or gathered in one place to create one large room.

The space of each room can be freely allocated, and by opening the polycarbonate sliding doors facing the living room, the entire house can be made into one large space.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office

For the materials and details, we pursued practicality and objectivity.

Everyday materials found in the city are reinterpreted and become architectural elements.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono

The movable bookcases/partitions are by modifying readymade products used in libraries.

The sliding doors between the living room and the bedrooms are thick polycarbonate panels with rails made of corrugated metal; an interpretation of Japanese paper screens using materials found in the city.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office

To enhance the thermal comfort, insulation was added to cover the entire unit, including the boundaries of neighboring units: In a housing complex, heat transfer to the neighboring unit cannot be overlooked.

The ceiling is lined with insulation panels backed with aluminum foil, a material normally used in a factory, which reflects the light coming through the windows and leads it deep into the room.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono

The bench by the window is a small piece of furniture inspired by the practicality of a Japanese room.

It is a place to fold clothes and a fun playground for children. A cantilevered rotating light illuminates the dining counter or the large working table.

Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office

Like the tatami bench, its structure is made from stainless steel square pipe, balancing thanks to a lump of lead inside as a counterweight.


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yurika Kono
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
© Yashiro Photo Office


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
Thermal Camera
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
thermal Environment Diagram


Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
Diagram
Flat Renovation In Sakurazaka
Plans