A Compact, Steel-Clad Home Slots Into a Narrow Lot in Osaka, Japan

There’s a place for everything in the warm, wood-lined interior of the Toolbox House.

Text by
Published by

At first glance, it can be hard to spot the Toolbox House. Tucked away on a long, narrow lot in the downtown area of Osaka, Japan, the silvery home sits much lower than its high-rise neighbors. Yoshihiro Yamamoto of the local firm YYAA designed the dwelling for a couple and one of their mothers, who sought a single-story house that is "compact and easy to use, like a toolbox."

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Get the Pro Newsletter

What’s new in the design world? Stay up to date with our essential dispatches for design professionals.

Subscribe

According to the architect, the clients previously lived and worked in a wooden building where they also ran a cosmetics company. While they initially sought to remodel this live/work space, "the patchwork building had many structural and insulation problems and was not a comfortable place to live in old age, so they decided to demolish it and build a new one." 

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

YYAA worked with the clients to design a simple, stretched layout that would accommodate comfortable living, as well as the intricate operations of running a business. "Inside the long and narrow one-story building, a small room for each purpose is packed into the toolbox-like space." 

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

"By extending the roof and wall toward the road, we improved the visibility of the office and made the entrance a semioutdoor multipurpose space for unloading, meetings, and machine maintenance. The elongated floor plan is divided into a public space on the east side and an office on the west side, each connected to the dining area and kitchen." A small garden is sited in the back of the house, near the mother’s private suite.

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA


Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Photo by Yohei Sasakura, courtesy of YYAA

Related Reading:

A Minimal Home on a Narrow Plot in Japan

This Minimalist Japanese Home Pivots Around an Indoor Garden

Project Credits:

Architect of Record: Yoshihiro Yamamoto, YYAA

Photography: Yohei Sasakura

Published

LikeComment

Home Tours