Borrowed Scenery: Miyato Salt Farm Onsen
Shenpei Ha. Tohoku, Japan
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Name of work in English
Borrowed Scenery: Miyato Salt Farm Onsen
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Name of work in original language
Tracing back the past vernacular
Prize year
Young Talent 2016
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Work Location
Tohoku, Japan
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Author/s
Shenpei Ha
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School
School of Art, Architecture and Design - London Metropolitan University.
London, United Kingdom
Young Talent 2016 YT Shortlisted
Borrowed Scenery: Miyato Salt Farm Onsen
Tracing back the past vernacular
Program
Mixed use - Cultural & Social
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Labels
Culture Centre · Aggregation
Set in the Tsunami struck area of Tohoku - Japan. A salt terrace farm/bath house hybrid that trace back the regional vernacular of rural Japan that is lost and has undergone a nativising discourse of hypermodernity after the 2011 Tsunami. This lyrical proposal also confronts the relationship of government’s ambition and Miyato island’s integrity.
This proposal is for a salt farm onsen [lit. hot springs] that will facilitate the restoration of Miyato Island after the 2011 Tohoku Tsunami in Eastern Japan. The seawall scheme by the Japanese government provided protection for the people living in coastal Japan. These structure however - ranging from 7 meters to 14 metres high - blocked off views out to the sea, putting the island’s local identity of being of unparalleled natural beauty at stake, something that the locals wanted to fiercely protect. This lyrical proposal explores in depth the relationship of government’s ambition and the locals’ wishes; the need for a concrete protection from the tsunami and the preservation of the natural landscape of what the island offers; an exercise in tracing back the regional vernacular of rural living and looking at the nativising discourse of concrete Japan which its influences can be dated back to mid-twentieth century. The project does not seek to challenge but rather synthesize the existing life on the Miyato Island and considers to marry the seawall into the terraced landscape. The architectural intervention: a salt terrace farm and an open salt hot springs. It goes into effort in bringing the language of the seawater back inland [the government have ordered the islander to move away from the beaches/coasts] as well as augmenting the aspect of living with sea salt water into an industry. And thus, the project seeks to solve two main problems: it protects the identity of the island as well as the ambition for the government in building the seawalls, and it opened up a new industry for the islander to attract new tenants and visitors of a younger generation. The proposal wishes to be an impetus for future development concerning the empirical experience as well as a call for challenging the notion of what is preservation and heritage as well as celebrating new developments.