Downloads
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51461/issn.2309-3072/80.2331Keywords:
contemporary Japanese architecture, minimization of space, capsule hotels, micro-space of residential buildingsAbstract
In recent years, tiny apartment buildings and tea houses, capsule hotels, and micro-gardens have become increasingly popular in Japan, which suggests a vivid tendency to reduce space. Japan is indeed one of the countries where the problem of high urban density and lack of free space has been acute for a long time. The space shrinking tendency in the future will only increase, this is due to such factors as urban overcrowding and extremely high land prices. Japanese architects showcase outstanding cases of micro-space development. It is certain that the effective organization of minimal space characterizes both the mentality of the Japanese and the peculiarities of the Japanese culture.
How to Cite
Published
Issue
Section
References
最小限住居の試作 (1952). Shinkenchiku, 27(7).
進化する箱 箱の家の20年』TOTO出版、2015
年
日本の建築空間と庭園 ―明治から20世紀初頭にかけての欧米におけるその受容と普及― (2011). 比較日本学教育研究センター研究年報 第7号, 7, 57-63. Tokyo.
Ando, T., & Mizutani, T. (1989). Tea house in Oyodo. Japan Architect (JA), 1(64), 306-317.
Berthier, F. (2000). Reading Zen in the Rocks: The Japanese Dry Landscape Garden (G. Parkes, Trans.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Isozaki, A. (2007). The contemporary tea house. Tokyo: Kodansha International.
Kurokawa, K. (1977). Metabolism in architecture. London: Studio Vista.
Mostovoj, S. A., & Pavlova, A. S. (2010). Landshaftnoe iskusstvo Yaponii: Istoki, tradicii, sovremennost [Landscape Art of Japan: Origins, Traditions, Modernity]. Vladivostok: Dalnauka.
Namba, K. (2000). 難波和彦『箱の家に住みたい. Kingdom.