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Bridgette Meinhold

Japanese Treetop Tea House is “Built Too High”

by , 03/19/09
filed under: Architecture, Treehouses

tea house, tree house, sustainable architecture, green building, terunobu fujimori, takasugi-an, japanese tree house, chino nagano japan

The Japanese certainly have a penchant for out-of-this-world tree-top architecture, and this incredible Takasugi-an tea house is no exception. Designed by architect Terunobu Fujimori, the tree-bound tea house stands precariously perched upon the trunks of two timbers erected on a plot of family land in Chino, Nagano Prefecture.

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4 Responses to “Japanese Treetop Tea House is “Built Too High””

  1. bem629 bem629 says:

    What a beautiful birdhouse! I was in Japan last summer and was continually amazed by the delicate, small pieces that were part of everyday life. Thanks for sharing this!

    –Brandon, http://www.urbaneblog.com

  2. I must admit truly amazing!

    It looks very unsafe though!

  3. [...] If you’re looking to take your career to new heights, how about putting your office on stilts? That’s what the architects behind this Nunnmps office in Chicago did in order to minimize the project’s footprint and preserve the site’s natural state. Two thirds of the building is underground and the rest is perched up high on stilts! [...]

  4. [...] you think of a tea house, a traditional low-slung thatched roof, post and beam structure may come to mind — this [...]

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