We are very used to the presence of wood all around us in various forms, as furniture, flooring, ceilings, doors, windows. But for wood to take all these forms, shifting from one to another according to need, I don't think that's common. Yet such a place exists in the form of a house built entirely of cedar wood. It's a bungalow, a small house, primitive and yet futuristic at the same time, built from beams stacked endlessly. The end result is a totally atypical place where everything can be anything: chair, bed, wall, window.
A construction that highlights the versatility of wood
The idea comes from the architecture studio I am Fujimoto Architects and takes wood's versatility as its starting point. In conventional architecture, we find wood in buildings in the form of load-bearing structures and beams, but also as walls, floors, ceilings, furniture, doors and windows. Japanese designers thought to go the other way around, to the essence. They put wood into a single form that embodies all its uses. It's actually a marriage of the philosophy of wood in its essence with architecture.
The cedar beams used in the construction have a special impact. They go beyond the idea of wood and become existence itself. Each side of the beams is 35 cm wide, a size that fits the human body. So you can sleep, sit, live on them. It is a return to the essence that only Japanese culture can do, can think. It is the symbol of wood just as the stone or the cherry blossom becomes the symbol of the garden.
In the beam house there is no place with a clear purpose. You cannot say this is the floor, this is the ceiling, look, here we have the walls. The place that was the floor can become a chair or a bed. Everything can be looked at from different perspectives, levels are relative, and people reinterpret space according to the needs of the moment.
Here, the conventional rules of architecture are overturned. There are no plans, no point of stability. And all thanks to the versatility of wood. No other material could undergo so many illusory transformations. Because no other material can be a building, a load-bearing structure, insulation, furniture and finishes all at the same time.
I love wood!
And us! 🙂
I'd be glad if you don't get mad at me for what I'm about to write, but I think if you love wood, you should work on a replacement so we don't cut it .... We admire its beauty after we destroy it ....
I certainly won't take offense to what you wrote. I love trees and forests too. Unfortunately, a wood substitute invented some time ago - plastic - is not only not chosen in place of wood, but has proven to be much more dangerous to the planet, being non-biodegradable. I'm convinced that options are being worked on that could save forests. We started with an online magazine (the printed version does not exist). 🙂
The problem with our wood is not that we use it, the problem is when every day trains of timber and logs leave for export, it is a crime and of course they don't take into account the re-stocking, that must hurt us!