Sides Core redesigns minimal hair salon to include library
由专筑网韩平,Vigo编译
日本Sides Core建筑事务所在一所理发沙龙里为其主人打造了一个享受阅读、艺术和音乐的空间。
Vinyl's Mix理发沙龙位于大阪,这也是该公司最新的地址。
Japanese studio Sides Core has created a space inside a hair salon for the owner's books, art and music.
The Vinyl's Mix hair salon is located in Osaka and is the company's newest location.
Its name derives from the owner's idea of integrating all of his cultural interests into the salon. The architects were challenged with coming up with a space to display them.
"The staff has curated a collection of books to showcase their ideas and personalities," said the architects. "The owner's idea [was to] integrate music, art and other forms of cultural expression into a hair salon."
他们决定在沙龙的后部创建一个图书馆,放置落地通高的胶合木书架用于储藏书记和记录。
胶合木也用来打造了一张简单的支架腿桌子,供顾客和员工休息和阅读。
They decided to create a library room towards the back of the salon, where floor-to-ceiling shelves made from plywood are used to store books and records.
Plywood was also used to create a simple trestle-legged table where customers and staff can sit and read.
沙龙的其他部分也都使用了原始的材料为空间增加了“未完成”之感。
十字形的钢梁覆盖天花板,用于悬挂照明设施,管道则用作衣架。
Raw materials were also used throughout the rest of the salon to give the space an "unfinished" feel.
Crisscrossing steel beams cover the ceiling and are used to hang lighting fixtures, while pipes are used as a coat rail.
"The redesigned interior has plenty of textured materials to harmonise with the existing rough, unfinished space, expressing the essence of the salon," said the architects.
"We chose to make use of those features rather than hide them for an energetic vibe."
从马路上通过覆盖整个建筑立面的巨大的移动滑门,整个沙龙尽收眼底。
但是为了保证一定程度的私密性,木质的隔板用来分隔洗头区域。
The length of the salon is visible from the street through a gigantic sliding glass door that covers the breadth of the facade.
But to ensure a level of privacy, wooden dividers were used to partition off the hair-washing area.
Sides Core has completed a number of beauty salons in Japan, including a hairdressers with an exposed concrete roof and a parlour with vine-like light fixtures.
Other unusual pamper spots in Japan include a forest-like parlour where birch trees are wedged between the floor and ceiling, and a hairdressers divided by diamond-shaped partitions.
Photography by Yoshiro Masuda.