T House

T House

FATHOM

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii

ARCHITECTS
Fathom

LEAD TEAM
Naoki Itaya, Hiroyuki Nakamoto

LEAD ARCHITECTS
Hiroyuki Nakamoto

MANUFACTURERS
Maruni, Mokuji Furniture

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
Qusamura

ENGINEERING & CONSULTING
Kamo Craft

PHOTOGRAPHS
Tatsuya Tabii

AREA
50 M²

YEAR
2024

LOCATION
Hiroshima, Japan

CATEGORY
Houses, Apartment Interiors

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii

Text description provided by architect.

When we were commissioned to renovate a newly built condominium for sale, our challenge was to create a space that would make the most of the new and beautiful living environment that was currently fully habitable.

During our visits to the site, we observed that while the location, security, and convenience were excellent, the furnishings and other items were a combination of mass-produced, ready-made items.

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii
T House
© Tatsuya Tabii

This seemed to us to be a combination that could be considered luxurious, but perhaps not in the way that the client had in mind. We felt that this was where the answer lay this time.

After further discussions with the client, it was agreed that two elements would be considered as the axis of the space: the use of upcycled paint made from oyster shells throughout the space, and the introduction of greenery into the space.

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii
T House
© Tatsuya Tabii

In order to change the view unique to the condominium, boards were applied on top of the wooden frames of the existing sashes. The walls were uniformly finished with oyster shell paint, which has a delicate texture and is smaller than the smallest grain of ricin.

The edges of the wall surfaces and the base of the existing wooden frames were softly and delicately coated so that the existing sashes and wooden frames were not visible from the outside.

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii
T House
© Tatsuya Tabii
T House
© Tatsuya Tabii

The common landscape of a series of ready-made sashes and wooden frames was transformed to create a more unified and harmonious space. The existing fixtures and fittings were then carefully removed from the wooden and stone grain prints while retaining their functionality.

The grain of the lauan wood was selected and stained to match the delicacy of the shell paint, with the grain transparency being adjusted accordingly.

Rather than simply placing potted ornamental plants, we considered whether it might be possible to physically interact with the greenery in the corner environment of the upper floors.

We placed the greenery on the boundary between the study and dining room, creating a soft organic partition between the two spaces and integrating the floor, pots, and dining room bench.

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii
T House
© Tatsuya Tabii

We hope you will agree that the architectural device integrating the dining bench was finished using the same material as micro cement.

By sculpturally forming the upper part of the dining bench into a trapezoidal shape as a bowl, the normal surface of the bowl becomes the backrest of the bench.

When you sit there, the leaves are above your head, as if you are resting on the trunk of a tree under the sunlight filtering through the leaves, surrounded by greenery that you can normally only experience.

It is possible to experience a special moment of contact with greenery, which can normally only be experienced on the Grand Line, on the upper floors, which gives a sense of floating. 

T House
© Tatsuya Tabii
T House
Plan

In order to blend the greenery into the whole space, the lack of small beams in the ceiling frame, which has been dismantled and exposed, is connected with a mirrored surface so that the reflection of daily life is projected onto the inorganic concrete ceiling.