Japanese firm hiroyuki arima + urban fourth have designed a home whose volumes and envelope are dictated by the lunar cycle. entitled 'forest in the space,' the two storey wooden home draws from a 300 year old tradition of gardening in the niigata prefecture wherein living spaces are shaped by forthcoming natural phenomena. while the site is a bucolic portrait of mountainous greenery, the domestic spaces are a composition that both parses and unifies living, working and welcoming.
The gestalt of the work is the relationship created between the forested site, the phases of the moon and the built form. trees were collected from the mountains are coordinated with the crisp white volumes based on the shade provided by the waxing and waning of the moon. the split levels are oriented to match season-specific angles of light and the apertures interrupt the ubiquitous white planes are expressly for the viewership of the moon.
This is an architecture meant to be experienced like the lines of waka, a form of japanese poetry wherein a story is repeated and relished for its infinitesimally changed iterations.