double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional japanese doma in house in itama

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional japanese doma in house in itama

coil kazuteru matumura architects completes re:teramoto

 

In the historic city of Itama, coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects has renovated a house along a main road of a residential area. The vision was to create a sense of connection from room to room and with the outdoors, while preserving the element of the doma — the Japanese word for entrance foyer, typically found in traditional Japanese homes built in the 19th and early 20th century.

 

The doma is a pad built on the ground level, with a simple layout including a wood burning cooker and sink. Like the kitchen of a modern home, the doma is the connection hub where families would naturally gather and allow the home to connect with the neighborhood. The Japanese architecture studio thus positions a large high-ceiling foyer as the core feature of Re:Teramoto, from which the remaining program stems. Natural materials, including plywood and washi paper, clad the structure and surfaces, further grounding the home.

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
all images by Yoshiro Masuda

 

 

a two-level entrance foyer forms the core of the house

 

coil Kazuteru Matumura’s renovation of Re:Teramoto started with the dismantling of the interior to expose the existing structure. Plywood was added to the perimeter walls and ceilings to provide seismic reinforcement of the existing structure and carefully applied to also serve as the final finish surface. As residents step into the new entrance foyer, featuring a double-level open ceiling, directly in front is a feature wall cladded with gray tile. This bold element serves as the backdrop for the staircase creating a flow up to the second floor.

 

On the second floor is another living room with a shoji style window and Shina plywood, and a bedroom finished with a balance of material such as Tosa washi paper that contains white charcoal to help absorb humidity. Connecting these rooms is a corridor with a slatted floor that provides a sense of walking on air when walking through the space. Natural light filters in through an existing arched window, framing views to the outside with seating. Further, the architects introduce mosaic tile details embedded in the control joints of the front approach and the entrance foyer concrete, and four sliding partitions to create a single large open floor space on the main floor. These features integrated into the renovation design make it possible for the entrance foyer of the modern home to be an enjoyable space that enhances users’ lifestyles, much like the doma that was once common in Japanese homes.

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects completes Re:Teramoto

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
the house sits along the main road of a residential area in Itama

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
drawing on the element of the doma – Japanese for entrance foyer

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
like the kitchen of a modern home, the doma is the connection hub where families would naturally gather

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
renovation of Re:Teramoto started with the dismantling of the interior to expose the existing structure

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
natural materials and tones including plywood and gray tiles clad the structure and surfaces

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional doma in coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects' re:teramoto house in itama
plywood was added to the perimeter walls and ceilings to provide seismic reinforcement of the existing structure

double-level foyer puts modern twist on traditional japanese doma in re:teramoto house in itama
double-level core space

coil-kazuteru-matumura-architects-re-teramoto-japan-designboom-1

on the second floor is another living room with a shoji style window, and a bedroom

reteramoto 11
connecting these rooms is a corridor with a slatted floor

reteramoto 12
natural light filters in through an existing arched window, framing views to the outside

 

 

project info:

 

name: Re:Teramoto

location: Itama, Hyogo prefecture, Japan
architect: coil Kazuteru Matumura Architects | @coil_matumura

construction: Toshio Sueishi, Inaho Construction

carpenter: Shinji Ikeda Furniture: Higashino Eizen

steel work: Ikubo Industry

wood production: Yoshino Maruta Forestry

door work: Higashino Eizen

wallpaper: Interior Mitani corp.

tile work: Mori Tile

flooring: Pandatech corp.

painting: Hamaguchi Painting

cleaning: Osoji Service

demolition: Shinji Ikeda

electric: Pandatech corp.

plumbing: Nagai Utilities

translation: Hiroshi Nobe

photographer: Yoshiro Masuda

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: ravail khan | designboom

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