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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

German Architect Redesigning Japanese Traditions

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
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German Architect Redesigning Japanese Traditions

Postby Mulboyne » Mon Feb 05, 2007 8:15 am

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Orlando Sentinel: Saving Japan's houses, history
Karl Bengs is passionate about polishing "gems" in Japan. He is a German architect who has attracted increasing amounts of attention for his work to restore old Japanese houses. For many years, Bengs has searched for old houses and buildings and breathed new life into them by preserving their traditional features while at the same time modernizing the interiors to create comfortable living spaces. "Old houses are like gems. They will shine if we polish and take good care of them," the 64-year-old Bengs said...His goal is not simply to restore the structure to its original state, Bengs said. To make the homes more comfortable to live in and to showcase his original designs, the architect incorporates functional, German-made materials and devices such as sash windows, ceramic roof tiles and lighting fixtures. He also makes bold use of unusual colors, such as pink and yellow to paint the exterior walls of traditional Japanese houses and buildings. Such attempts to combine Japanese and European tastes have been well-received and often-covered by the media. As a result, Bengs, who has run his own firm, Karl Bengs & Associates Ltd., in Tokamachi since 1998 now receives orders from across the nation...more...
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Postby Choeki » Mon Feb 05, 2007 12:53 pm

I was planning on doing something like this myself, back when I planned on being a long term resident. It's not exactly rocket science to renovate an old house - you have to do the same thing to make old houses in other countries livable and up to safety regulations.

Nevertheless, I'd rather live in a refurbished Second Empire style house with modern wiring, insulation, and central air/heating than some old Japanese farm house...
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Postby Mulboyne » Sat Feb 24, 2007 1:27 am

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IHT: Lovers of Japan's fading country homes find new ways to save cultural treasures
Anybody who thinks Japanese all live in cramped quarters should take a look at architect Yoshihiro Takishita's home. The peaked roof shelters four floors. Massive, roughhewn, dark wood beams ― fitted together without nails ― frame the expansive living and dining area. A series of sliding glass doors open to a verandah overlooking the hills and coastline of Kamakura. For Takishita, his farmhouse is more than just a home. It's also a labor of love: He is one of a growing number of architects and conservationists who are trying to salvage centuries-old Japanese "minka" farmhouses and bring them into the 21st century. "A lot of wisdom, good thinking and good materials went into making these homes," said Takishita, who found his house in central Japan's Gifu prefecture, disassembled it and then restored it on the hills over Sagami Bay, south of Tokyo, in 1976. "There is a beauty and value to traditional architecture that we can take advantage of even today," he said...more...
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Postby Mulboyne » Sun Sep 30, 2007 7:43 pm

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Postby dimwit » Sun Sep 30, 2007 8:34 pm

Well let's see. The reason no sane person wants to live in a traditional house is that they are high cost-high maintenance-low durablity structures. Other than that they are swell.:rolleyes:

Even the winks to Japanese tradition that many modern houses possess such as a tokonoma usually end up containing ill-suited storage space.
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Postby DrP » Sun Sep 30, 2007 10:25 pm

Lighten the roof, insulate the walls and add proper plumbing and they aren't bad. Though you'd think the Japanese carpenters would have learned this like 500yrs ago. "Aromatic cedar" whats that? OH - we cut all the real wood and decided to plant these since they smell nice. Anyone who builds a wooden house knows that cedar is best left for closets and siding. Other than that and you'll have a house full of etopic dermatitus sufferers , not too mention a complete kindling kit ready for a match!
See you in PyonPyang!
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Postby Mulboyne » Sat Dec 22, 2007 6:21 pm

LATimes: Replanting farmhouses
SOMA, JAPAN -- ASKED why he wants to move an old Japanese farmhouse across the globe, Harrelson Stanley had a simple answer. "I have to do it," said the 44-year-old woodworker, his fingertips poking through worn gloves after weeks of pounding and pulling the house apart. "It's what I'm meant to do." Larry Ellison, chief executive of Oracle Corp., built a Japanese-style estate in Silicon Valley, complete with a teahouse he imported from Japan. But Stanley is no high-flying billionaire. And this is no delicate teahouse. Stanley and his wife, Sayuri, have four kids under age 18 and an annual income that averages $65,000. The farmhouse they are shipping to their home in Pepperell, Mass., from the rice paddies of northern Japan is a massive, 6,000-square-foot structure built in 1891 of hand-hewn logs. "My wife sees the day-to-day financial reality and says, 'This is crazy,' " Stanley said...more...


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Postby Dragonette » Sun Dec 23, 2007 5:13 am

Impractical or not, nobody can deny that old Japanese farmhouses are beautiful. The same is true for most Japanese art/design from previous centuries.

Ukiyoe, which were often little more than throwaway flyers or ads for the latest entertainers, hanga, shunga, were all undeniably georgous, (yeah, shunga bits-and-pieces were larger than life, but there were no truth in advertising laws back then so let's just say that was "artistic license" ;-) ).
That stuff even inspired the art nouveau movement, which is still a big influence in modern commercial art and design.

Contrast that with the present - "kawaii" is king, (queen?), what passes for avant-garde rebel fashion is just plain goofy, and most ads and flyers, design-wise, just plain suck!

Hello kitty dildos? (Whew, what a turn-on!)
Every headline in RED? :puke:
So WTF happened to "understated elegance"?

Looking at all that crap every day has GOT to be at least part of the reason that Nihonjin have gotten to be so ...weird, ne? :wall:
[font="Trebuchet MS"][SIZE="1"]Believe nothing, no matter where you read it or who has said it, not even if I have said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and your own common sense.
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