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japanese shrines inform 2m26’s zero

Jan 13, 2024Jan 13, 2024

Amid the mountainous landscape of Kyoto City, 2m26 has perched a small chicken coop that reinterprets traditional Japanese shrine architecture. Titled Niwatorigoya, the zero-impact project construction project makes use of local natural materials including cedar bark, stone, and cypress, assembled together using traditional Japanese joinery techniques to create a shelter that protects free range chickens from predators during the night, while paying homage to the Ise shrine.

In a modern-day reinterpretation of this historic structural typology, the wooden coop is supported by 12 round pillars supporting a cypress framework with sliding wooden walls, and a cozy internal space where beams offer perches for the chickens to comfortably roost and rest.

all images by Yuki Okada

The architects at 2m26 have topped Niwatorigoya with a sloping cedar bark roof recalling those of old folk Japanese houses. Typically harvested by hand during summer months when cedars are full of sap, the barks are maintained flat and left to dry for several months before being utilized for roofing or as a wall covering material. Along the facade, wooden panels enclose all four sides of the coop and can slide open to allow the farmers easy access to collect the fresh eggs. Inside, a small staircase made of a single piece of wood leads chickens to their designated living space.

The space has been conceived as a low impact structure, sitting on a bed of stones using locally sourced wood. The design concept follows the traditional Japanese concept of creating flexible structures where certain elements of the building can be altered without having to tear down the entire structure to rebuild. As such, Niwatorigoya can easily be disassembled and returned to the soil once there is no more need for the structure, without leaving any impact on its natural environment.

Niwatorigoya sits amid the mountainous landscape of Kyoto City

2m26 sits the zero-impact structure on a bed of stones

a sloping roof recalling those of old folk Japanese houses

chicken coop Japanese cedar architects