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  • 長沼 徹, 平 輝, 山﨑 鯛介, 加藤 雅久, 安田 幸一
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2023年 88 巻 808 号 2062-2071
    発行日: 2023/06/01
    公開日: 2023/06/01
    ジャーナル フリー

    This paper analyzes the original interior color scheme at Tsuchiura Kameki House #2 through the scrubbing survey. As the architect's own house Tsuchiura Kameki House #2 is an experimental house where the modern living space design was practiced in many aspects. With the concept of gray-based pale interior colors for the ideal modern lifestyle, Tsuchiura applied such expressions in the two-storey high living room and connected spaces such as entrance and gallery on multi-floor levels. In other rooms, colors were variated according to the function and space planning.

  • 長沼 徹, 平 輝, 山﨑 鯛介, 加藤 雅久, 安田 幸一
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2023年 88 巻 805 号 1157-1165
    発行日: 2023/03/01
    公開日: 2023/03/01
    ジャーナル フリー

    This paper analyzes the construction method and expression of exterior and interior finishes in the houses designed by Tsuchiura Kameki before WWII. Tsuchiura proposed a wooden dry construction system in the 1930s as a low-cost modern urban housing model and applied new materials such as slate board and fiberboard. In many houses, Tsuchiura painted the exterior white to make the joints unobtrusive impression and painted the interior in pale colors to soften the walls as the background of living space. Such exterior and interior presence are unique compared to other architect's dry construction houses.

  • 田中 厚子
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2005年 70 巻 598 号 185-191
    発行日: 2005/12/30
    公開日: 2017/02/11
    ジャーナル フリー
    This article discusses Tsuchiura Kameki's use of International Style and traditional dwelling style elements in his prewar houses. Of the 56 houses he designed in the prewar period, 32 have International Style exteriors, 3 are Japanese style, and 11 incorporate elements of both. 11 of the houses' interiors are designed for chairs and tables, 5 for tatami, and 37 for both Japanese and Western-style living. Only 9 of the houses use the "International Style exteriors and chair-style living arrangements" Tsuchiura preferred, and 21 of them mix chairs and tatami mats behind an International Style facade. This demonstrates the difficulty of insisting on International Style exteriors and chair-style living arrangements. In reality, most of Tsuchiura's houses had individual Japanese-style rooms, but these were designed to be unrecognizable from the exterior.
  • 福田 晴虔
    建築史学
    1990年 15 巻 133-138
    発行日: 1990年
    公開日: 2018/09/13
    ジャーナル フリー
  • -建築専門誌に示された断熱萌芽期の建築家による断熱材導入-
    高橋 彰子, 元岡 展久, 長澤 夏子
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2018年 83 巻 746 号 611-621
    発行日: 2018年
    公開日: 2018/04/30
    ジャーナル フリー
     The purpose of this study is to reveal the situation of heat insulation in Japan in the 1930s, when the idea of insulation was scarcely known, and to describe innovative insulation methods proposed by certain architects who pioneered this concept during that decade. Furthermore, we examined the reasons why heat insulation did not become popular in those days.
     The heat-insulation methods used in Japanese houses in the 1930s can be classified into two types: wet-type and dry-type construction methods. In most applications of the conventional wet-type construction method, Celotex was used as a heat insulator and was applied only to the roof or/and the ceiling. This implies that heat insulators were used for the purpose of heat shielding.
     Amongst the dry-type construction methods, a new method called “Trockenbau,” which was mainly influenced by the methodology of Bauhaus, gained significant attention. Ken Ichiura, Kameki Tsuchiura, Chikatada Kurata, and others, who were the main innovators of Trockenbau, introduced the concept and materials of heat insulation to the architecture field through their designs and research activities. They also played an important role in promoting further research on heat insulation. In houses constructed using the Trockenbau method, Celotex was applied to the ceilings and walls as a finishing material and rice husks were used to fill the hollow sections of the walls in some cases. However, their interest in heat insulation remained confined to Trockenbau and did not extend to the idea that the introduction of heat insulation would improve the quality of life in Japan.
     On the other hand, some architects attempted to employ their own distinctive methods of heat insulation. Mamoru Nakamura and others worked on the wet-type construction method, whereas Antonin Raymond, Yoshiro Taniguchi, and others worked on the dry-type construction method.
     Mamoru Nakamura applied double heat insulation. Rice husks were filled into the spaces between structural members, making an “entire house built within boxes of rice husks;” the thermal performance was enhanced by the interior insulator. Nakamura believed that houses should offer usability, security, thermal comfort, and beauty and that comprehensively designed houses enrich the quality of life.
     Antonin Raymond used Celotex not as a finishing material but rather between studs placed inside wall bodies, thereby forming hollow layers partitioned by Celotex to further enhance the heat-insulation performance. Raymond recognized the importance of heat insulation as well as the importance of facilities in modern architecture. Yoshiro Taniguchi inserted tin plates in addition to Celotex inside wall bodies. His attempts to improve the thermal environment of houses were much more scientific than TrokenBau. The statements given by Taniguchi provide deep insights into heat insulation and reveal that he envisioned the advantages of heat insulation, which is a standard notion today.
     Despite the endeavours of these individuals, heat insulation was not widely understood at the time. This may have been because material development and technology improvement were hindered by the influence of WWII, and the Japanese were hesitant to adopt heat insulation owing to Japan's indigenous customs and thoughts.
  • 竹内 徹, 浜田 英明
    国立近現代建築資料館紀要
    2021年 1 巻 17-27
    発行日: 2021/09/30
    公開日: 2022/12/14
    研究報告書・技術報告書 フリー
    Compared with architects, not many people can list-up the names and achievements of structural designers. However, behind every great architects there are always structural engineers who supported them. In response to a request from the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Architecture, the Japan Structural Designers Club has been researching materials left by talented structural designers collaborating with Hamada laboratory at Hosei University since 2017. In this paper, based on the results of the survey, the achievements of representative Japanese modern structural designers are overviewed and discussed.
  • 高橋 彰子, 元岡 展久, 長澤 夏子
    日本建築学会技術報告集
    2017年 23 巻 53 号 209-214
    発行日: 2017年
    公開日: 2017/02/20
    ジャーナル フリー
    The purpose of this paper is to focus on insulation of wooden Japanese house in 1950s, and to make clear how architects have adopted insulation to their designs. Studies on following subjects were made, through researching detailed section drawings and articles in Japanese architectural journals in 1950s; 1) Ratios of insulated elements and insulation materials, 2) Details and heat performance of insulated elements, 3) Architects’ remarks on insulation, 4) Architects who were highly conscious of insulation.
  • 田中 厚子
    日本建築学会計画系論文集
    2008年 73 巻 624 号 449-455
    発行日: 2008/02/28
    公開日: 2008/10/31
    ジャーナル フリー
    After his apprenticeship with Frank Lloyd Wright in the early 1920s, Tsuchiura Kameki would go on to become a leader of the Japanese modernist movement in the 1930s. His interest in the new movement can be traced back to his time in Los Angeles and at Taliesin, where he met architects like R.M. Schindler, Werner Moser and Richard Neutra who were importing the new movement from Europe. By the late 1920s, Tsuchiura's concern with functionality and standardization had transformed his style from Wrightian motifs to abstract white boxes. This paper analyzes his designs and writings to clarify the process by which he adopted and adapted the modernism that was recognized as International Style in the 1930s.
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