Fukuyama-based firm, keisuke kawaguchi+k2-design have created 'rhythm and plum tree,' a home located among fields of the shizouka prefecture in japan and sited parallel to an eastern road. the east facade affords the family privacy with a windowless plane, while the north and south sides of the house capture the speed of passing cars with a rhythmic pattern of fenestration. the central gesture of the architecture is an expanse of glazing open to the west that reveals multiple interior levels and dematerializes the planes of the wood-clad facade.
Thin panels of a richly grained wood create a visual texture that contrasts with the white interior planes. the bedroom is tucked away on the ground floor and separate from the large open plan of the split-level upstairs living space. the middle level is the living room, and the upper level, less than a meter above, is the kitchen and dining area. in the center of the house, a small courtyard with a singular plum tree enveloped in an atrium of glazing.
The transparency of the glass enclosure allows the family to be visually connected while inhabiting all three levels. the variety of openings throughout the volume - small apertures to the north and south, a picture window to the west, and the atrium - allows light to play in the house during both the sunlit hours pouring and the warm, lamp-lit glow of the night.