From the architect. Location of this Starbucks is somehow characteristic, as it stands on the main approach to the Dazaifu Tenmangu, one of the most major shrines in Japan. Established in 919 A.D., the shrine has been worshiped as “the God for Examination,” and receives about 2 million visitors a year who wish their success. Along the main path to the shrine, there are traditional Japanese buildings in one or two stories. The project aimed to make a structure thatharmonizeswith such townscape, using a unique system of weaving thin woods diagonally.
We solved the problem by slightly changing positions of the fulcrums, dividing the four sticks into two groups to avoid concentration on a single point. Piling up of small parts from the ground was highly developed in the traditional architecture of Japan and China. This time the method was greatly improved in combination with state-of-the art technology so that people are brought further into the architecture. It is a fluid, cave-like space.
I chose "harmonizes", "weaving" and "sense of direction" as my three key words.
New concept: Weaving creates the harmony between sense of direction and experience.
Reference: "Starbucks Coffee / Kengo Kuma & Associates" 27 Feb 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed 30 May 2017. <http://www.archdaily.com/211943/starbucks-coffee-kengo-kuma-associates/>
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