

Through these apertures, staircases of varying angles are affixed, suggesting access within this geometric tree. Through these apertures, one is able to see and feel through to the spaces adjacent, above and below oneself, and furthermore, beyond what is clearly defined. The walls, ceilings, and floors are blatantly punctured and are interlocked three-dimensionally. The character of this residence is that it is covered/riddled by holes. A proposal for a landscape where the duality of opposites individuality and holistic co-exist through relationship.

A network of relationships interwoven across many places throughout the branches. While these branches are individual places under protection, they are simultaneously equipped with mutual relationships that allow one to sense the presence of one another across each branch. Within a large tree, there exist few large branches, of which endows numerous qualities -pleasant places to sit, sleep, and present places for discourse. To live in a multi-story dwelling in a dense metropolis like Tokyo is somehow similar to living in a large tree. House H is a dwelling for a family of three located in a residential district in Tokyo.
