Minimalist Japanese home comes with a library open to the public
It’s one sketching to build a home that feels ringing and open to the neighborhood; it’s an entirely different commercial to open up your house to whoever is passing by. This house in a runt Japanese town takes neighborly goodwill to the coarse with a ground-floor library open to the public.
The owner of the simple concrete house enlisted Japanese studio Hiroshi Kinoshita and Associates to transform the street tranquil of the house into a community amenity. A wall of sliding glass doors welcomes passersby into a gallery-like space. Bookshelves line the intriguing white walls and a smooth concrete bench curves into a reading circle.
Toward the back of the library, a set of closed-off stairs leads to the instant floor, where the private spaces are equally restrained. The colossal main living area features poured concrete floors, a raw concrete ceiling, white walls, and the necessities—a couch tucked into a corner, a dining wrong, a few cabinets, and a simple kitchen setup. It’s spicy, quiet, and another good spot to dive into a book.
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