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  1. Aluminum House : Location: Fujisawa, Kanagawa, Japan: Period: 1970.9~1971.5: Structure: wood frame: Scale: 2 srories: Site Area: 379.18m2: Building Area: 84.24m2: Total Floor Area: 110.16m2 : Magazine Title : JA7202 (Shinkenchiku-sha, Japan)

  2. Aluminum House in Sakurajosui : Location: Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, Japan: Period: 1997.10~2000.1: Structure: aluminum frame: Scale: 2 stories: Site Area: 183.98m2: Building Area: 86.4m2: Total Floor Area: 109.08m2 : Magazine Title : JA 37 00-spring/Lotus 4: DETAIL 2001.4/Tectonica 22 (Global Comunicacion, Spain) Momument (textpacific publishing ...

  3. Architect. Toyo Ito. The “Aluminum House” was Itos first project, completed in 1971, when he was 31 years old. It’s amazing that even 50 years ago, Ito attempted to let futuristic, industrial material (aluminum) collide with our rustic heritage (the hut or silo-looking house design).

  4. Toyo Ito & Associates. Name of the building: Aluminium house. Site: Sakurajosui, Tokyo. Client: Private (married couple) Contractors: Nippon Light Metal Group. Engineer: Masato Araya (Oak Structural Design office) Other actors: Kawaguchi Mechanical Engineering (mechanical engineer) Building permit: 1997. Start of construction works: 1999. End ...

  5. 17 de mar. de 2013 · Uma das primeiras casas, em 1971, a “Aluminum House”, consistia numa estrutura de madeira revestida inteiramente a alumínio. Em 1976, projetou a “White U”, uma casa feita para a sua irmã (imagem acima), já interesse na obra de Toyo Ito.

    • Vanessa Quirk
  6. Aluminum House in Sakurajosui : Architects : ITO, TOYO : Date : 1997-2000 : Address : Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, Japan : School : Floor Plan : 109.08 SQ.M. Description : Photos and Plan

    • Setagaya-ku, Tokyo, Japan
    • 1997-2000
    • ITO, TOYO
    • Aluminum House in Sakurajosui
  7. the first fully aluminum structure built for residential use—with exterior finishes, floor and roof slabs, shear walls, columns and beams all aluminumdesigned in the late 1990s by Toyo Ito and structural engineer Masato Araya, consulting closely with the Building Center of Japan, a quasi-governmental organization. The