Ryue Nishizawa, Moriyama House
Essay in: J. Aragüez (ed.). The Building Book. Zurich: Lars Müller, 248-255. Alexandra Vougia.
Originally presented in The Building Symposium – Part II at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University (15 November 2014).
The Moriyama House, designed by the Office of Ryue Nishizawa, was completed in 2005. Its plan stuns with its simplicity. Set on a rectangular plot, the house comprises of 7 larger and 3 single-room parallelograms that, with their outline reduced to a fine line, establish a non-hierarchical composition; a vanished center, an absence of symmetry and of any other axes of ordering, a lack of any determined rule regarding the analogies and relations of the building figures. The only apparent guideline is the slight alignment of a few of the volumes and the overall receding from the outer limits of the plot. In a similar manner, hierarchy is also absent from the elevations of the project, with the rectangular plans being almost randomly extruded to create a disordered landscape of parallelepipeds; a visual analogy to the Tokyo cityscape.