Takuya Hosokai architecture studio has designed a complex of 34 homes in Niigata, Japan. In a constantly changing neighborhood where traditional buildings are disappearing in new constructions.

The figure of the building will be fundamental, a high-rise building that contrasts and seeks to reflect its presence but at the same time slender, symbolizing the human scale. Its design and architectural composition remain in tune with the rest of the buildings in the neighborhood, it does not dissociate itself from it but rather seeks to integrate and connect.
The Niigata III Housing Complex was designed by the Takuya Hosokai studio with the intention of designing from the inside to the outside, generating a relationship between the two. The structure will be responsible for dividing the interior space in a smooth way.

The building has very much in mind both the human scale maintaining the visual cohesion of the user and the structural framework itself that maintains an urban scale, connecting with both the person and the neighborhood itself.
 

Description of project by Takuya Hosokai

Housing complex Niigata III is an apartment building composed of 34 dwellings.  There are a number of traditional Japanese houses still exist on neighbouring plots, and cultural facilities, shopping districts, universities, public offices and a park within 500m.  In order to integrate an apartment block in a location where various programs interact with each other, we considered an aggregate composed of 34 types of dwelling that cater to differing lifestyles.

We tried to reconstruct the relationship between inside and outside spaces in collective housing in an urbanized context.  We designed from inside to outside and also outside to inside, considering the separating role of the perimeter wall, the slab and structural frame, and the use of a terrace as a transition zone.

Designing from internal space.- 

 - Place the outer envelope walls as a buffer zone on the outside of the terrace, and control the feeling of the distance between the inside and the outside.

 - Arrange openings in the external envelope to prevent a direct line of sight from inside to outside and vice versa, this provides privacy and separation between dwellings and the city.

 - The relationship between the columns of the structural frame and the slab (in plan) allows the internal space to be divided softly, causing a gradual spatial change from the inside to the outside.

Designing from external space.-

Through the construction of the building we wanted to express both a human scale and the density of the city, whilst maintaining visual coherence.  To achieve this, dwellings were grouped in 2-3 storey volumes with a similar proportion to the old wooden row houses nearby.  The resulting expression of the thin outer envelope of walls and slabs therefore provides a human scale.  Simultaneously the structural frame adopts an urban scale comprising a 10-storey housing complex.  The two contradictory scales are demonstrated in both the residential space and the cityscape.  The urban scale of columns and beams within rooms give residents an awareness of the neighbouring dwellings, reminding them of their connection to the collective. In recent years, with rebuilding progressing and old buildings in this area being lost, we envisage this structure as archival architecture, inheriting fragments of the historical cityscape and expressing memories in the future.

The structure is a rigid frame with an economic span that is required to establish a 10-storey housing complex.  Niigata, a provincial city, is a typical car-oriented society and is subjected to heavy snowfall so we arranged piloti on the ground floor to enable as many parking bays as possible.  The grid span is based on the module of a parking bay.  The structural frame as proposed enables the slab, outer envelope and the boundary walls to be completely freely designed in plan.  The outer envelope and the cantilevered slabs are rigidly joined. By stacking 2 to 3-storey walls, it reduces the deflection effect on the cantilever slab and instead produces a long-term reinforcing effect.  For long-term loads, the outer envelope reinforces the slabs, and the slab laterally supports the outer envelope against seismic forces. 

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Architects
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Design team
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Architects.- Takuya Hosokai, Hayato Ikegawa, Satoshi Hasebe.
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Collaborators
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Structure.- EJIRI ENGINEERS.
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Builder
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HIROSE Co., Ltd.
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Area
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Site area.- 547,32sqm. Building area.- 288.41sqm. Total floor area.- 2643.07sqm.
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Dates
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2018.
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Location
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Niigata, Japan.
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TAKUYAHOSOKAI is an architectural atelier in Tokyo, Japan, established by Takuya Hosokai in the fields of art, architectural design, urbanism and cultural analysis in 2005. Takuya is a first class authorized architect in Japan.

He received the Master of Excellence in Architecture in 2005 from Yokohama National University in Japan, and graduated with distinction for exhibiting his thesis project at the 1st International Architectural Biennale Rotterdam as a part of the Tokyo Ring Project in 2003 from the same university. 

From 2008 to 2011 he worked at AMO / OMA Rem Koolhaas and BIG | Bjarke Ingels Group as a senior architect on numerous large scale regional planning projects. During this time he lived in several countries, in the US, South America and Europe, for his research in world life, culture, history, economy, religion and politics.

In 2011 he resided in Madrid, Spain, carrying out studies into radical structural design and innovative materials with Antón García-Abril at Ensamble Studio. For this research he received a grant from Arts and Culture Division Cultural Affairs Department Agency for Cultural Affairs Government of Japan.

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Published on: October 23, 2020
Cite: "Maintain harmony in the neighborhood. Housing Complex Niigata III by Takuya Hosokai" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/maintain-harmony-neighborhood-housing-complex-niigata-iii-takuya-hosokai> ISSN 1139-6415
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