Dec 12th, '12, 08:50
Posts: 105
Joined: Aug 27th, '11, 07:44
Location: Malmö
by Math » Dec 12th, '12, 08:50
Dec 12th, '12, 10:03
Posts: 1796
Joined: Sep 15th, '09, 16:11
Location: Wilton, New Hampshire USA
Been thanked: 2 times
by JBaymore » Dec 12th, '12, 10:03
Stunning..... where is it?
best,
............john
Dec 12th, '12, 13:56
Posts: 1312
Joined: May 27th, '09, 16:55
by teaisme » Dec 12th, '12, 13:56
how inspiring
thanks so much for the link
Been flipping through pics of his work on the web...here are a couple teahouse pics I really enjoyed
http://architecture.rmit.edu.au/Project ... e_0001.jpg
Teahouse tetsu: like an old magical fairy tale
http://www.flickr.com/photos/76223770@N ... otostream/
the Too-high tea house
I picture many a good sessions in there, some tea friends too tea drunk to manage their way back down

I like his idea behind the trees “One leg is dangerous and three legs are too stable and boring.”
Dec 12th, '12, 19:19
Posts: 105
Joined: Aug 27th, '11, 07:44
Location: Malmö
by Math » Dec 12th, '12, 19:19
Yes! Great pictures Teaisme, thanks for posting!
I wonder how he manages to build something that looks straight out of a studio gibli movie, here in Sweden the draconic buildning safety regulations would never let something crazy like that pass. Too bad, we could really need more inspirational works like the houses of mr. Fujimori.
Dec 15th, '12, 05:17
Posts: 375
Joined: Jun 15th, '09, 07:05
Location: Lat: N 59º 37' 3.79" Long: E 17º 49' 35.49" or thereabouts
by sriracha » Dec 15th, '12, 05:17
Love the top pic, the words 'himitsu kishi' came to mind.
A tea hut of my own would ofc be the ultimate project. First a house and then build a tea "stuga" in the yard. Not that I'm likely to ever own a house but you know...

Dec 15th, '12, 06:49
Posts: 68
Joined: Apr 25th, '09, 01:20
Location: Melbourne, Australia
by robbie_olive » Dec 15th, '12, 06:49
Fujimori-sama (I use the polite address here to be humble) had an exhibition and a talk called 'Shelter: of Kindness', and one of his teahouses that was installed at the RMIT University Gallery here in Melbourne a couple of years back, and I was lucky enough to see one of his extraordinary structures in the flesh! And studying sado made it even more meaningful to me. Google it, it's quite fascinating....!
