Baanhaus

Shinkenchiku Residential Design Competition 2006 24 Apr 2006

Shinkenchiku Residential Design Competition 2006

Theme: The Plan-less House

Judge: Kengo Kuma

Deadline: Monday, 11 September 2006

All entries should be mail to: 
Shinkenchiku Residential Design Competition 2006
Shinkenchiku-sha, Co., Ltd. 2-31-2, Yushima, Bunkyo-ku, 
Tokyo 113-8501, Japan

For more information, visit the Plan-less House 2006 website.

Theme Description
It is generally thought that the plan is a means for describing lifestyle. 
The fundamental principle of this descriptive technique is division. It is thought that the 
lifestyle inside a house is divided with the device of �walls.� Therefore, if only the elements 
called �walls� are picked out, and given an expression in which they are emphasized, people 
may understand the lines on a drawing that indicate the �walls� as describing the essence of 
a house.

Yet should a house be �walls�? Why can we not describe a house just by furniture? Why can 
we not describe a house just by tableware? Or what about a descriptive method using only 
floor textures? As the floor is the only component that the human body directly touches 
(actually, there are also doorknobs and toilet seats), if we were to describe a house by a 
technique of scanning with the body, the house would be described as a collection of 
textured floors. Or it would also be possible to describe a house in terms of air temperature, 
or in terms of malodorous places due to wind flows. 

Why have I become so skeptical with regard to the descriptive method of walls? It is because 
I feel a sense of unease with the division of lifestyle, and the corresponding methods of 
spatial division. The cause might lie in devices such as mobile phones, which invalidate 
spatial divisions, and might also lie in the transformation (the becoming-amorphous) of 
interpersonal relationships and family relationships. Or, perhaps the �lifestyle� of the person 
that was the initial premise for the �division of lifestyle� disappears during the era of building 
a house. Because a person perhaps builds a house for somewhat distinct purposes, if this is 
investigated more thoroughly, the house, including every �thing,� rather than being 
something made for some particular purpose could also be said to somehow become a 
manifestation of its era. Taking a broad view of all of this, I am interested in a plan-less 
condition.

Application and Entry

Contents: Site plan, floor plan, elevation, section, perspective drawings and axonometric 
drawings in any scale. Photographs of models may be used. You are free to append detailed 
drawings and other charts or descriptive texts that make your design clearer. Descriptive 
texts should be in either English or Japanese.

Paper: Complete all drawings, illustrative materials, and texts on TWO sheets of A1 size 
(594mm*841mm). DO NOT USE A PANEL.

Media: You may use blueprints, pencil, ink, color, or photographs. NO ELECTRONIC MEDIA.

Identification: On the back side of each of two sheets of paper, the entrant must show his or 
her name, occupation, age, address (home and office), telephone and facsimile number and 
e-mail address. All of these items should be typed for the sake of legibility. Cover this 
information with a strip of opaque paper that may be easily removed later.

Announcement of Winners

Winners will be announced in the 2006 December issue of �SHINKENCHIKU� and vol. 64 issue 
of �THE JAPAN ARCHITECT�.

Prize
The prize (total: 1,500,000 yen) will be distributed at the discretion of the Judge.

Notice
* No registration is necessary for entry in this competition.
* Entries must never have been made public in any form previously. Nor can they be 
submitted simultaneously to any other competition.
* The hosts reserve publication rights with regard to all entries.
* Questions will not be answered by the hosts. All matters not covered in the regulations 
listed above are left to the discretion of the entrants.
* The work must not (in total or in part) infringe on a copyright. Do not use images copied 
from magazines, books or Web sites. If a copyright infringement is discovered in the winning 
entry, the award may be taken back at the hosts� discretion. 
* No entries will be returned.
* Entries will only be accepted if they adhere to all the rules appropriately.
* All necessary costs for submission (airmail charge, air courier charge, tax, insurance, etc.) 
must be fully paid by entrants. 



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