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100-year-old Japanese home is lined with plywood for an intentionally incomplete look

02/13/2015
by
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  • ephemeral house by naad interior view
    Many architects delight in tackling renovations of older homes, finding ways to highlight their ancient bones with modern twists. Japanese firm <a href="http://www.naad.jp/" target="_blank">NAAD</a> has unveiled a project with a much different slant. To create <a href="http://www.dezeen.com/2015/02/12/naad-renovation-century-old-house-japan-plywood-skin-unfinished/" target="_blank">Ephemeral House</a>, the team gutted a 100-year-old home and lined nearly every inch of the interior with unfinished <a href="http://inhabitat.com/this-stunning-madrid-apartment-uses-plywood-as-a-multi-functional-space-saving-feature/" target="_blank">plywood</a> for an intentionally rough look. Instead of a popular sleek, polished look, NAAD’s 20-something-year-old client has a temporary home that was designed to look incomplete.
    1
  • ephemeral house by naad sparse interior
    Each room of the timber-framed home is lined with plywood.
    2
  • ephemeral house by naad interior
    Left unstained, the plywood covers every wall, floor, and ceiling and makes the house look almost like a construction job left undone.
    3
  • ephemeral house by naad solid staircase
    The house, located in Kyoto, is also largely empty.
    4
  • ephemeral house by naad sitting area
    Its sparsely furnished look emphasizes the ‘incompleteness’ of the dwelling.
    5
  • ephemeral house by naad stairs
    A solid staircase rises through the center of the structure and is perhaps the only surface not lined with untreated plywood.
    6
  • ephemeral house by naad closing partition
    Although Ephemeral House looks dramatically different than a traditional Japanese home at first glance, it does possess some familiar features. Sliding dividers can be expanded to create individual rooms, or left retracted for a more open floor plan.
    7
  • ephemeral house by naad with woman
    Closing the sliding partitions creates smaller rooms, offering some privacy and coziness in this otherwise stark space.
    8
  • ephemeral house by naad with room
    Architects Yoichiro Hayashi and Shogo Sakurai designed the home with this ‘unfinished’ aesthetic at the request of their young their client, who wanted a <a href="http://inhabitat.com/alex-chinneck-builds-a-wax-house-in-london-just-to-watch-it-melt/" target="_blank">temporary</a> place for living—and nothing more.
    9
1/9

ephemeral house by naad interior view

Many architects delight in tackling renovations of older homes, finding ways to highlight their ancient bones with modern twists. Japanese firm NAAD has unveiled a project with a much different slant. To create Ephemeral House, the team gutted a 100-year-old home and lined nearly every inch of the interior with unfinished plywood for an intentionally rough look. Instead of a popular sleek, polished look, NAAD’s 20-something-year-old client has a temporary home that was designed to look incomplete.

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Categories:  Homes
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