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FUTURE LIVING. Collective Housing in Japan | Claudia Hildner | 9783038216681

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FUTURE LIVING

Collective Housing in Japan

Author:Claudia Hildner

Publisher:Birkhäuser

ISBN: 978-3-03821-668-1

  • Paperback
  • English
  • 160 Pages
  • Oct 31, 2013

Single-family houses are becoming increasingly outdated. They offer no response to demographic change or to the fact that there are fewer and fewer life-long relationships. They are often too inflexible for new family models or ways of cohabitation.

The publication FUTURE LIVING. Collective Housing in Japan presents projects in recent years in Japan, which respond to the need for new forms of housing. The architects are developing solutions that allow residents to live together but still maintain enough distance and privacy. The presented apartment types and their layout allow for a variety of life models. Particularly interesting here is the use of spaces that provide a gradual transition from public to private space—an approach to building that, according to experts, could revolutionize western residential architecture.

The publication FUTURE LIVING. Collective Housing in Japan portrays these new forms of building and living based on prominent Japanese examples that include Shigerun Ban, Sou Foujimoto, and SANAA. With comprehensive plan material and photographs in an attractive layout.


After the success of Small Houses the author Claudia Hildner devoted herself to a new trend in Japanese residential architecture.


 

Single-family houses are becoming increasingly outdated. They offer no response to demographic change or to the fact that there are fewer and fewer life-long relationships. They are often too inflexible for new family models or ways of cohabitation.

The publication FUTURE LIVING. Collective Housing in Japan presents projects in recent years in Japan, which respond to the need for new forms of housing. The architects are developing solutions that allow residents to live together but still maintain enough distance and privacy. The presented apartment types and their layout allow for a variety of life models. Particularly interesting here is the use of spaces that provide a gradual transition from public to private space—an approach to building that, according to experts, could revolutionize western residential architecture.

The publication FUTURE LIVING. Collective Housing in Japan portrays these new forms of building and living based on prominent Japanese examples that include Shigerun Ban, Sou Foujimoto, and SANAA. With comprehensive plan material and photographs in an attractive layout.


After the success of Small Houses the author Claudia Hildner devoted herself to a new trend in Japanese residential architecture.


 

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