Start Slideshow
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanThe Optical Glass House in <a title="Japan’s Optical Glass House Hides A Secret Garden Behind its Glazed Façade" href="http://inhabitat.com/uid-architects-nest-house-is-an-eco-friendly-retreat-for-three-women-in-a-japanese-forest/" target="_blank">Japan</a> takes its name from its unique translucent façade, which shields the home's tranquil courtyard from the surrounding urban environment. Designed by <a title="Japan’s Optical Glass House Hides A Secret Garden Behind its Glazed Façade" href="http://www.nakam.info/" target="_blank">Hiroshi Nakamura & NAP Co. Ltd</a>., this single-family home in downtown <a title="Japan’s Optical Glass House Hides A Secret Garden Behind its Glazed Façade" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroshima" target="_blank">Hiroshima</a> features a gorgeous secluded patio with a garden and pool, all hidden behind the bricked-glass wall. The translucent wall filters sunlight and provides some privacy, while protecting the house from the noisy street.1
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanThe Optical Glass House sits among tall buildings in downtown Hiroshima.2
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanIts glazed façade was hand-made made from 6,000 pure-glass blocks that hide a luscious calm patio behind it.3
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanThe sunlight coming from the east refracts through the glass façade and through a super lightweight metal curtain and sliding doors.4
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanVisible from all rooms, the garden offers inhabitants a serene space that is full of pure air and protected from the cars and trams’ noise and pollution.5
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanThe interiors are open, airy and uncluttered, with small objects hidden behind a floor-to-ceiling wooden cupboard that functions doubling as a dividing wall.6
- Hiroshi Nakamura's glass facade Optical Glass House in JapanTo realize such a wonderful façade, the bricks were casted in extremely high transparency glass, from borosilicate, a raw material commonly used for optical glass.7