interlinked garden rooms stretch beneath single roof in tamada & wakimoto’s japanese house

Jul 15, 2025 - 22:00
interlinked garden rooms stretch beneath single roof in tamada & wakimoto’s japanese house

tamada & wakimoto arranges residence around gardens

 

In the rural outskirts of Tochigi, Japan, on a former farmstead surrounded by rice fields and small factories, Tamada & Wakimoto completes Roof House, a gently scattered residence designed to stretch daily life into the garden. The project sits on a 2,000-square-meter plot once occupied by a large farmhouse and framed by hardwood trees. For a young client relocating from the city, the architects were asked to create a place to live, work, and connect with others while keeping the house adaptable for the future.

 

The team breaks the house down into several compact buildings and arranges them around semi-outdoor courtyards. These in-between spaces, what they call ‘earthen floor’ gardens, are loosely held together under one thin, extended roof, resulting in a relaxed, low-slung architecture that lets people move between rooms and outdoor spaces, letting the landscape, weather, and local rhythms shape how the house is used each day.


all images by Kenta Hasegawa, unless stated otherwise

 

 

roof house is designed with adaptability in mind

 

Each side of the Roof House has a different feel. Japanese architects Tamada & Wakimoto open the main garden toward the trees and include an outdoor kitchen for cooking and gathering, especially in spring when the cherry blossoms bloom. Near the entrance, a shaded area under the eaves becomes a space to sit, talk, or greet visitors. To the north, a walled garden offers room for weekend carpentry or working on the car, chores that are part of the rural setting.

 

Designed with change in mind, Roof House can be reconfigured over time. The private part of the house, the one housing the bedroom and bath, can remain a vacation home, while other areas could serve as a small shop or gallery.


a gently scattered residence designed to stretch daily life into the garden | image by Tamada & Wakimoto


the project sits on a 2,000-square-meter plot | image by Tamada & Wakimoto


the architects were asked to create a place to live, work, and connect with others

interlinked-garden-rooms-stretch-beneath-single-roof-in-tamada-wakimoto-japanese-house-designboom-large03

the team breaks the house down into several compact buildings  | image by Tamada & Wakimoto


volumes are organized around semi-outdoor courtyards


a relaxed, low-slung architecture


people move between rooms and outdoor spaces

interlinked-garden-rooms-stretch-beneath-single-roof-in-tamada-wakimoto-japanese-house-designboom-large01

landscape, weather, and local rhythms shape how the house is used each day


each side of the Roof House has a different feel


Roof House can be reconfigured over time

interlinked-garden-rooms-stretch-beneath-single-roof-in-tamada-wakimoto-japanese-house-designboom-large02

the private part of the house can remain a home, while other areas could serve as a small shop or gallery


a shaded area under the eaves becomes a space to sit, talk, or greet visitors

 

 

project info:

 

name: Roof House

architects: Tamada & Wakimoto Architects | @tamadawakimotoarchitects

location: Tochigi, Japan

 

design team: Makoto Tamada, Natsuko Wakimoto

structural engineer: Junichiro Ito

photographers: Kenta Hasegawa, Tamada & Wakimoto Architects

The post interlinked garden rooms stretch beneath single roof in tamada & wakimoto’s japanese house appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

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