tokyo - japan
David Bennett, "Exploring Concrete Architecture", Birkhäuser Architecture, Basel, 1997
Melanie Birk, "Frank Lloyd Wright's Fifty Views of Japan: The 1905 Photo Album (Wright at a Glance)", Pomegranate, Petaluma, 1996
Norman F. Carver, "Form and Space of Japanese Architecture", Shokokusha, Tokyo, 1955
Judith Dunham, Scot Zimmerman, Eric Lloyd, "Details of Frank Lloyd Wright: The California Work, 1909-1974", Chronicle Books, Vancouver, 1994
Jiro Harada, "Lessons of Japanese Architecture", Dover, New York, 1985
Teiji Itoh, Yukio Futagawa, (translated by Richard L. Gage), "The Classic Tradition In Japanese Architecture: Modern Versions Of The Sukiya Style", Weatherhill, New York, 1972
Le Corbusier, (edited by Tadao Ando), "Le Corbusier: Houses", Toto Publishing, Tokyo, 2001
Takeshi Nakagawa, (translated by Geraldine Harcourt), "The Japanese House: In Space, Memory, and Language", I-House Press, Tokyo, 2006 (originally published in Japanese in 2002)
Kevin Nute, Hisao Koyama, John Sergeant, "Frank Lloyd Wright and Japan: The Role of Traditional Japanese Art and Architecture in the Work of Frank Lloyd Wright", Routledge, London, 2000 (first published in 1993)
Atsushi Ueda, "The Inner Harmony of the Japanese House", Kodansha, New York, 1990
With Japanese homes eschewing windows that offer passersby interior views, deploying a wall concept on the south side, with floor to ceiling windows providing mountain vistas from living room and line of sight to Mt. Fuji from penthouse
Interior Italian slate courtyard permitting both privacy and sky views, in addition to the freedom to open Japanese-style bathing area window, or electronically switch between transparent and non-transparent window setting
Optimizing spaciousness via natural wood floors throughout; black Italian tile for main entrance, penthouse, interior courtyard, and baths; white walls that extend from the interior through and beyond veranda and inner courtyard; original artwork by Picasso and Chagall; modern furniture; in-home elevator; multimedia digital entertainment centers; robust steel-reinforced concrete structural design offering earthquake resistance, ideal affinity for climate and seasons of Japan, and modernist look and feel
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