In recent years commercial buildings have begun to look the same all around the world. Japan’s are no exception. Made of glass, steel, and concrete, office towers, shopping complexes, and hotels in Tokyo bear a striking resemblance to their counterparts in Houston, Shanghai, and London. Houses, however, remain particular to place. Unique microcosms molded by local customs and social mores, the houses of one country are still distinct from those of another. They are stubbornly rooted in their own indigenous context.
In Japan, the very idea of "house" is not the same as in other countries. Many Japanese houses, and especially those designed by avant-garde architects, do not look, feel, or function like American or European homes. Some are oddly shaped or capped by steeply slanting roofs. Other houses feature rooms in unexpected places: A third-floor kitchen is practically inconceivable in the West, yet in Japan it happens all the time. No matter where they are located, all houses must provide shelter for sleeping and eating. Beyond those basic requirements, Japanese houses part ways with those from other points on the globe...
ntroduction
Chapter One The Tiny House
ChapterTwo The Indoor Outdoor House
ChapterThree The Multigeneration House
Chapter Four The Work and Play House
Chapter Five The Vacation House
Notes