Trand White House New Era 2010

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Trand  White House New Era 2010
Here’s a house that takes the reflective and climate-cooling power of white roofs to the nth degree! The roof is white, but so is almost everything else in this Japanese seaside home by Takio Shiotsuka.
Trand  White House New Era 2010
The organization is unusual. This large window faces away from the ses, surprisingly.
Trand  White House New Era 2010

It houses the master bedroom. The whiteness continues to dominate the interior. Calming, but a bit sterile? This looks like a hospital room to me.

Trand  White House New Era 2010
Stranger still, the bathing area is right in the middle of the house and wide open on all sides to views.

Trand  White House New Era 2010

But there is a good reason for this. The entire house can be seen through in both directions , so you can see the sea, and in the other direction, the hills.

Trand  White House New Era 2010
And when you need to be in the bathroom, the view can be shut out with a special glass that can be made to become opaque making the bathroom private when privacy is needed.

Trand  White House New Era 2010
The house is sunk partway below grade, to take advantage of the geothermal properties of cooling and heating at five feet or more underground to reduce the home’s energy bill.

Trand  White House New Era 2010
The passageways from front to back are on the sides of the house.

Trand  White House New Era 2010
…and is yet big enough to view the sea view here.

All in all – an odd house. The relentless whiteness, which makes environmental sense outside: because if every roof in a region experiencing greater temperature increases was white – it would help reduce regional climate change. A white roof also reduces heating and cooling costs by about 20%.

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