Row Houses and a Garden Path within a Residential Neighborhood.
This cluster of row houses is located about ten minutes on foot from Nishi-Ogikubo Station in a quiet residential area of Suginami, Tokyo, within a neighborhood of detached homes.
While Nishi-Ogikubo is often associated with its lively backstreets, bars, and independent shops, a short walk away reveals a calmer landscape of narrow lanes, flourishing gardens, and a dense yet humane living environment.
The project was designed to accommodate a total floor area of approximately 1,600 square meters. Rather than imposing a large mass, we sought to form conditions that resonate with the district’s original grain.
Twenty-three row houses are connected as one continuous building, yet a narrow path runs east–west through the site, creating permeability and a quiet sense of shared ground.
On the first floor, the living-dining areas were carefully designed to mediate between interior life and the garden path that runs through the site, using layers of planting, mounds, and eaves to maintain a gentle balance between connection and privacy.
The path serves multiple roles: a circulation route for residents, a casual meeting place, and a playground for children. It enables everyday interactions to occur naturally, allowing neighbors to sense one another’s presence without intrusion, reinstating a scale of living long embedded in the fabric of this neighborhood.