RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Tokyo’

Tiny in Tokyo: Ultra-Narrow House Slotted into an Alley

16 Jul

[ By Steph in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

tokyo narrow house main

At just six feet wide, this incredibly narrow residence inserted into an alley in dense urban Tokyo is the latest example of Japanese architects thinking way outside the box when it comes to building new housing. The city is so developed, there’s almost no land left to build anything new, so they tend to get incredibly creative with even the oddest-shaped plots.

tokyo narrow house 2

tokyo narrow house 5

The four-story house by YUUA Architects and Associates extends about 36 feet into a former alley between two older buildings, and while the street-facing facade features floor-to-ceiling windows to maximize daylight and views, intimate spaces like bedrooms, bathrooms and main living areas are tucked into the back for privacy.

tokyo narrow house 6

tokyo narrow house 4

The minimalist interior design scheme includes floating platforms at various levels for a sense of openness, some of them made of metal mesh to let as much light pass through the house as possible. While such tiny residences are often kept bright white to create an illusion of extra space, YUUA makes an unusual choice with dark-painted walls.

tokyo narrow house 3

tokyo narrow house 7

There’s a semi-sunken basement for storage, and the first floor features a study area facing the street and a bedroom in the back. The third floor is comprised of an open-plan kitchen, living room and dining area, while the uppermost floor contains a bathroom, bedroom and terrace. Considering it’s only about as wide as an average adult male is tall, the house looks surprisingly livable.

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Tiny in Tokyo: Ultra-Narrow House Slotted into an Alley

Posted in Creativity

 

Like a Ninja: Tokyo Apartment is Only for the Nimble

12 Jun

[ By Delana in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

1 ninja house

A tiny 750 square foot apartment is definitely not a lot of space for two people, but this couple was lucky enough to find an exceptionally creative architect. This Tokyo home had a lot of room to grow vertically, so Hiroyuka Shinozaki Architects used floating floors and a series of stairs and ladders to create a spacious living area and studio.

2 open home layout ninja house

3 top floor unfinished space ninja house

The interior of the home is virtually free of walls and even features huge cutout areas in some of the floors. The architects named it House T, but the owners call it a “ninja house.” Their reasoning behind the name? The couple feels that they have to be as nimble as ninjas to navigate the innovative interior.

4 nimble interior ninja house

5 house t tokyo

Large hanging lights and the wide-open space fill the combination home/studio with bright, cozy light. Part of the space is largely unfinished, with plywood floors and very little furniture. It contributes to the austere yet homey feel of the apartment.

6 light filled open floor plan ninja house

7 nimble ninja house tokyo

In addition to the absence of walls, many of the home’s functions and features were built into the walls to maximize available floor space. A decent amount of storage is built into the home’s central set of stairs. While walking along ledges and tiptoeing around holes in the floor might not be for everyone, the pair who live in the apartment say that the unique layout – and the unusual way in which they have to navigate it – has made them healthier.

Share on Facebook





[ By Delana in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Like a Ninja: Tokyo Apartment is Only for the Nimble

Posted in Creativity

 

Sans Ads: See Tokyo Scrubbed Clean of Signs & Advertisements

23 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

tokyo ad free art

Tokyo seems inseparable from the banners, billboards, logos, slogans and other flashy neon alerts, except when seen through the lens of this French graphic designer in a startling black-and-white image series turned into a alternating GIFs.

tokyo no ads new

tokyo vendor sans ads

tokyo without advertisements signs

Tokyo No Ads by Nicolas Damiens illustrates just how shocking the contrast is, particularly when switching back and forth between before and after versions. Each of the seven scenes here was meticulously edited with attention to every last pixel of graphics.

tokyo with blank billboards

tokyo street no neon

tokyo scrubbed white clean

To outsiders, Japan’s capital is nearly synonymous with signage saturation, so stripping them away changes the character of the place dramatically. Promoting everything from TV shows and movies to local shops and businesses, it is almost impossible to find a place in the city not showered in advertising. Perhaps the biggest surprise: the landscape almost looks more alien without its characteristic adverts.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Sans Ads: See Tokyo Scrubbed Clean of Signs & Advertisements

Posted in Creativity

 

Lytro opens an interactive studio in Tokyo

17 Mar

Lytro has announced the launch of Lytro Studio in Tokyo. The studio is open to the public so that anyone can visit to learn about light field imaging and the technology behind it. This includes training on how to use Lytro’s platform and software, as well as demonstrations of how its cameras and related technology work. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Lytro opens an interactive studio in Tokyo

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Cyberpunk City: Reframing Tokyo as a Futuristic Wonderland

04 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Culture & History & Travel. ]

PhokusSelect_10

With a background and interests in skateboarding, anime and architecture, this photographer brings both a youthful imagination and an outsider’s eye to an area of the world famous for speculative fiction-worthy landscapes and high-tech cityscapes.

architecture japan interior

PhokusSelect_01

Sam Pritchard‘s interest in architecture evolved alongside his interest in Japanese cities and culture, which in turn helped inspire his recent Phokus Archives remodel (years in the making and with audio accompaniment by Reso). The child of an architect, he grew up seeing the built environment through the lens of a skateboarder and urban explorer in England. Meanwhile, he developed fascination with futuristic cityscapes through (often Japanese) video games and movies, from Sega, Nintendo and Atari to Akira and Ghost in the Shell.

high

architecture japanese bridge infrastructure

After spending time as an architectural photographer in London, Pritchard moved to Japan to follow up on his childhood fascinations and see what structures are really like in the fabled land of futuristic tech. The results were surprising: “Since living in Japan the reality of day-to-day life in isn’t really any more tech or futuristic than it is in any other developed city or country. But in my photography, I try to create the illusion that it is some kind of digital future world that lives up to my childhood expectation of the place.”

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Cyberpunk City Reframing Tokyo As A Futuristic Wonderland

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Culture & History & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Cyberpunk City: Reframing Tokyo as a Futuristic Wonderland

Posted in Creativity

 

Herringbone House: Tiny Tokyo Residence Split into 7 Levels

29 Nov

[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

tiny house japan 1

Measuring just 280 square feet, this tiny house in Tokyo by architecture firm Flathouse includes a public biscuit shop on the first level and manages to fit a lot of function into an irregularly shaped footprint by taking advantage of vertical space. Built on a system of parallelograms that create a herringbone pattern both inside and out, the home has no interior walls, dividing the rooms with a series of staggered platforms instead.

tiny house japan 2

tiny house ajapan 6

tiny house japan 9

For privacy-obsessed Westerners, this may seem like a strange move, but interior walls aren’t seen as a necessary part of a home in many areas of Japan. In this case, eliminating these dividers keeps a small space open and encourages rapid movement from one area of the home to the next. The shop owner can quickly move from the personal areas of the home to serve a customer on the first floor, and back again.

tiny house japan 3

tiny house japan 4

tiny house japan 8

All levels are connected by a central staircase. The dining room, living area and private rooms are all set on small platforms with barely enough room for the furniture required in each. The shop and bathroom are tucked into a concrete basement level, while the rest of the home is lined in a light and airy larch plywood.

tiny house japan 5

tiny house japan 7

tiny house japan 10

This approach uses the full available height of the property, creating a comfortable space despite the restrictive dimensions of the plot, a common architectural challenge in Tokyo.

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Herringbone House: Tiny Tokyo Residence Split into 7 Levels

Posted in Creativity

 

Photographer reveals massive 360-degree Tokyo panorama

02 Aug

tokyo_pan_1.jpg

If you haven’t seen the 600,000 pixel, 360 degree Tokyo panorama that’s flying around the internet, clear your schedule for the next hour and take a look. It’s a work from photographer Jeffrey Martin, who previously documented London in a similar fashion. With a lot of storage and processing power, Martin captured the photo with a Canon 7D, 400mm F5.6L lens and a robotic assistant. Click through and check it out.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Photographer reveals massive 360-degree Tokyo panorama

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Researchers in Tokyo develop high-speed subject tracking system

17 Jul

Screen-Shot-2013-07-16-at-11.01.35-AM.jpg

Engineers at Tokyo University’s Ishikawa Oku Laboratory have come up with new technology to track extremely fast motion. Their new system – which uses ‘Saccade Mirrors’ for pitch and tilt, a ‘pupil shift system’, and very fast image processing – is able to keep even the quickest subject in the center of the frame at all times. According to engineers, the initial application for this system could be to capture video at sporting events. They expect it to be market-ready in about two years. Follow the link for a video demonstration of this intriguing new technology.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Researchers in Tokyo develop high-speed subject tracking system

Posted in Uncategorized

 

[ Beautiful smiles ] Harajuku, Tokyo, Japan

23 Jan

Some cool visual art images:

[ Beautiful smiles ] Harajuku, Tokyo, Japan
visual art
Image by || UggBoy?UggGirl || PHOTO || WORLD || TRAVEL ||
Harajuku (?? "meadow lodging") is the common name for the area around Harajuku Station on the Yamanote Line in the Shibuya ward of Tokyo, Japan.

Every Sunday, young people dressed in a variety of styles including gothic lolita, visual kei, and decora, as well as cosplayers spend the day in Harajuku socializing. The fashion styles of these youths rarely conform to one particular style and are usually a mesh of many. Most young people gather on Jingu Bridge, which is a pedestrian bridge that connects Harajuku to the neighboring Meiji Shrine area.

Harajuku is also a fashion capital of the world, renowned for its unique street fashion. Harajuku street style is promoted in Japanese and international publications such as Kera, Tune, Gothic & Lolita Bible and Fruits. Many prominent designers and fashion ideas have sprung from Harajuku and incorporated themselves into other fashions throughout the world.

Harajuku is also a large shopping district that includes international brands, its own brands, and shops selling clothes young people can afford.

MORE INFOS : EXPLORE MORE : SOAR AND SMILE:
WIKIPEDIA = IT’S HARAJUKU

Intense blue
visual art
Image by -hndrk-
TodaysArt Festival 2007 The Hague
(TRIPTYCH of United Visual Artists)
View On White

The Mirror Log: Day 12 – DSC_1540
visual art
Image by Fabrice de Nola
Description: Fabrice de Nola The Mirror (detail), acrylic and oil on canvas, cm 100 x 120.
Date: July 1st, 2011.

Note: on left side of image the QR code link to the Letter from a Fukushima mother.
The right QR code link to Backyard World, a website that posts news, analysis, images, videos, and other references about the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear crisis.

From July 1st to September 4th, 2011, the painting was exhibited at the Riso Contemporary Art Museum, Palermo, Italy.

Cite as: Fabrice de Nola, 2011. The Mirror (detail).

Fabrice de Nola is an Italian-Belgian visual artist. He was the first artist in the world to create works of art, in 2006, using painted QR codes containg web links and texts readable through mobiles.
??????????? ??????????????2006?????????????????????????

Join me on Facebook
Follow me on Twitter

 
Comments Off on [ Beautiful smiles ] Harajuku, Tokyo, Japan

Posted in Photographs

 

Tokyo Stock Exchange places Olympus shares ‘under supervision’

10 Nov

Olympus’s woes have deepened after the Tokyo Stock Exchange placed its shares ‘under supervision’ and warned of possible delisting. The news follows the admission that senior executives colluded for decades to hide investment losses from the market, and a subsequent statement from Olympus that it would not be able to submit its quarterly earnings report on schedule. The TSE has warned that the company will be delisted if the report is not submitted by 14th December, prompting a further fall in its shares which have now lost almost two-thirds of their value over the past month.
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Tokyo Stock Exchange places Olympus shares ‘under supervision’

Posted in Uncategorized