Introducing Danchi House | Minimal Residence Placing a Danchi Layout Above a Garage, a custom-built home example by Yoshihiro Yamamoto Architects Associates, a Architect / Design office in 302, Zeniya Honpo Main Building, 14-6 Ishigatsujichō, Tennōji-ku, Osaka
Minimal residence placing a danchi layout above a garage
All superfluity eliminated: the minimum living volume for two adults.
The entrance is a wide sliding door to accommodate moving a motorcycle in and out. Fabricated from softwood plywood.
Simple mono-pitched roof. No gutters.
East elevation. The first floor is a garage.
Second floor. Parent and child private rooms flank the dining kitchen; both are Japanese-style rooms in accordance with the occupants' lifestyle.
Walls, ceilings, joinery and stairs are all constructed from softwood plywood.
First-floor doma (ground-level utility space).
Inner Garage
Galvalume Steel Sheet
Forever Home
Entrance Doma
Bike Garage
Built-in Garage
Garage House
Compact House
House with Doma
Narrow House
lowcost
shed
smallhouse
softwoodplywood
1–7: Yohei Sasakura; 8: YYAA
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This is a small house sited within a tranquil village. The client, who was born and raised in public housing (danchi), requested that the living environment replicate the conditions of a danchi as closely as possible. Their requirements included a dining kitchen directly connected to the entrance, a multifunctional Japanese-style room adjacent without an intervening corridor, an extremely compact wet area (with a preference for a twin-tub washing machine), and ceiling heights matching those of a danchi. The only deviation was a desire for a spacious garage for hobbies. Within a constrained budget we pared the plan down to danchi-level compactness, combined structural members with finish elements, and minimized material and equipment costs. The result is a garage house with the garage on the first floor and the danchi-like living on the second floor. Although Japanese danchi are sometimes disparagingly called 'rabbit hutches,' for those born and raised in them they embody an ideal of compact, resource-efficient living. This project reaffirmed how the efforts of postwar predecessors who conceived the danchi as a model for collective housing continue to inform occupants' expectations.
Use | Single-family residence Structure and scale | Two-storey timber construction Design supervision | Yoshihiro Yamamoto [YYAA] Construction | [Hirota Construction]
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