TOKYO STROLLS

Tokyo Ordinary : Hidden Temple Gardens

I LOVE it when I stumble into an enclave of Tokyo that makes me feel like; “WOAH! THIS IS A SECRET GARDEN!”. And just for a while, in that moment, surrounded by flickering sunlight and wrapped in near silence… I feel like maybe, just maybe…I might be the only person that knows about it. Of course reality kicks in and more often than not, the city breaks my bubble. Someone will inevitably stroll into my seized moment of ataraxia.

The last time this happened was just a couple of weeks ago. Walking our regular route to a park we regularly visit, we stopped at a temple so familiar to us. It had snowed the night before and the snow had settled in neat pools on the grassy areas rendering the paths, even the tiny ones, completely bare and revealing an unnoticed pathway that curved beyond our regular sightline.

 
 
 
 

Feet followed curiosity. A whispering breeze lifted ume blossoms into the stillness. The path wound on into a scene of dancing sunlight, receding snow, water and glimmering koi.

 

This ain’t no grand temple with an extensively laudable history. It’s local. It’s shunted up against a major road and tucked between houses on a residential and much loved walkway. Yet still, I encountered many fleeting and beautiful details here. Textures upon textures, layered with light, crisp shadows and subdued hues harkening the arrival of Spring.

 
 
 

One particular detail that has stayed with me since, is the hedge and the rock. I just can’t get over it!

A hedge trimmed so seamlessly that it appears smooth. Like a perfectly weathered pebble. The age old rock that emerges from within the hedge is rough and hewn with cracks and intrusions. A beautiful contrast of visual textures and human interaction.

THERE IS ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW TO NOTICE…

I must have walked right past this walled garden hundreds of times not knowing it was there. It just goes to show, no matter how well we think we know a place, there is always, always, something we have not noticed before. There is always something ‘new’ to see.


Location:

Enjōin

2 Chome-17-3 Daita,

Setagaya City,

Tokyo 1

55-0033

 

Hidden Architecture : Itsuko Hasegawa

“Walking is mapping with your feet. It helps you piece a city together, connecting up neighbourhoods that might otherwise have remained discrete entities, different planets bound to each other, sustained yet remote.”

Lauren Elkin

Doing my best to get “a little bit lost” during my routine march to kindergarten, I headed straight past this modest looking building, before I did a complete about-turn and headed right back with my iPhone camera poised for action. Perhaps aside today’s architectural aesthetic, this building might seem unremarkable or a bit odd . Yet this building has been on my radar for some time and I was delighted to finally “meet” it face-face.

Hidden Tokyo Architecture. Itsuko Hasegawa.

PANAMA BOY was originally Itsuko Hasegawa’s Atelier in Tomigaya, Tokyo, completed in 1986. What is especially interesting about this building, to me, are the perforated aluminium panels on the façade. Designed to emulate cloud patterns, they obscure the interior of the building whilst creating mesmerising optical effects. These screens became part of the visual language of Hasegawa’s structures. Henry Plummer aptly described them as…

Weight-destroying screens which drift like a fog around buildings by Itsuko Hasegawa are not so much taut curtains, as freely formed, cut-out webbings that simulate soft fleecy clouds, or ocean spray sparkling in the air
— Henry Plummer

Image Credit: Itsuko Hasegawa

Tokyo Architecture Light Shadow Screens

Credit: Itsuko Hasegawa

Credit: Itsuko Hasegawa

Credit: Itsuko Hasegawa

Hasegawa, like Toyo Ito and Fumihiko Maki expanded the concept of the paper and wooden screens of traditional Japanese architecture to the gauzy and lustrous metals we see in modern architecture today. Whilst dark wood and washi is often replaced with metal and commonplace materials, the profound Japanese love for unadorned beauty is still very much expressed in the industrial starkness.

Hasegawa referred to her aluminium screens as “hanging gardens of light and wind” and although I have never been in one of her designed building, I am still fascination with her ideas of using perforated metal to simultaneously screen and invite light into a building. I can only imagine that light streaming through the countless perforations renders the cold metal into an illusion of gossamer.

Despite all these light-filled poetic ideas, the reality remains that yet it is so easy to walk by her once atelier and be none the wiser of the story that she unfolded here. Tokyo is a city adept at hiding architectural gems amid its ordinary neighbourhoods. It pays to walk slower and look again here. It really does.


If you like my Hidden Architectures series, you may also like my blog on Ko-fi about an unexpected Shin Takamatsu building I encountered when I veered slightly off course on my regular walk.