Since the founding of Atelier Nishikata in 2000 in Tokyo, partners Reiko
Nishio and Hirohito Ono have built just four residential works, three of
them renovations, all of them publicly inaccessible. Until now, this
remarkable collection of private spaces was little known outside Japan.
Almost, Not: The Architecture of Atelier Nishikata belatedly presents
this extraordinary, almost-ordinary architecture to an international
audience.
Leslie Van Duzer, author of four monographs on 20th-century architecture
and a former magician's assistant, draws parallels between the
architects and magicians in this hybrid architectural monograph and
magic instruction manual. The introductory essay, "Almost Not," outlines
their shared aspirations and techniques, including delay by layered
rules, déjà vu by repetition variation, and detour by category jumping.
Detailed project descriptions unpack Atelier Nishikata's methods step by
step, demonstrating the possibility of bewildering effects achieved with
minimal means. Each project is richly illustrated with design studies,
new diagrams, detailed drawings, and photographs, including before and
after views of renovated spaces, and intimate post-inhabitation scenes.
A concluding conversation with the architects provides further insights
into their approach.