Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Sukiya-zukuri

Katsura Imperial Villa, Kyoto, an early example of sukiya style. Note that the right-hand building is older than the left-hand one, and more similar to the older shoin style.

Sukiya-zukuri (数寄屋造り) is one type of Japanese residential architectural style. Suki (Ateji: 数寄 or 数奇) means refined, well cultivated taste and delight in elegant pursuits,[1] and refers to enjoyment of the exquisitely performed tea ceremony.

The word originally meant a small structure for the Japanese tea ceremony (known as a chashitsu) and was associated with ikebana and other Japanese traditional arts. It has come to indicate a style of designing public facilities and private homes based on tea house aesthetics.[2]

Historically and by tradition, sukiya-zukuri is characterised by a use of natural materials, especially wood. In contemporary architecture, its formal and spatial concepts are kept alive in modern materials such as steel, glass and concrete.[3]

  1. ^ Kenkyusha's New Japanese English Dictionary, Fourth Edition 1974, p.1674
  2. ^ Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan, First Edition 1983,vol. 7, p.265
  3. ^ Itoh (1972), p224

Previous Page Next Page






Sukiya-Stil German Sukiya-zukuri Spanish Sukiya-zukuri French 数寄屋造り Japanese Sukija-zukuri SL 數寄屋造 Chinese

Responsive image

Responsive image