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The People’s Choice
Awards
Category: Nonresidential
Daiku Woodworking
21122 Park Hall Road, Boonsboro, MD 21713 301 432-6396
Traditional Teahouse
Peter Wechsler is the owner of Daiku Woodworking. He sent us the following
report:
I studied with a temple carpenter in Japan, and have since built a number of
Japanese-style buildings in the Washington, D.C. area, but this was my first
attempt to design and build a traditional teahouse. The client does not practice
tea ceremony, but pr imarily wanted a peaceful place to escape the stresses of
daily life and enjoy nature. The site is a fairly steep, wooded slope behind her
house, leading down to a creek, out of sight of any other houses. I had just
returned from a visit to Japan, where I had gotten interested in teahouses, so I
ended up making it as close as possible to a traditional teahouse, using the
traditional design method of folding paper models.
Teahouses are small,
generally with a floor space of 9' x 9' or smaller, depending on the number of
straw mats or tatami. They are rustic in appearance, and nothing is supposed to
call attention to itself, but at the same time they are built with extraord
inarily high standards of workmanship and attention to detail. One of the first
Westerners to see a teahouse, a 16th century Portuguese missionary, said it
"seemed to have been built by the hands of angels rather than by those of men."
While the basic features
of tea ceremony architecture were established by Sen no Rikyu, the founder of
the tea ceremony, teahouses are all very different in layout and appearance, and
the aim is a feeling of freshness and spontaneity, reflecting aesthetic
philosophy associated with the tea ceremony, which emphasizes the rough over the
smooth, the irregular over the symmetrical, and the natural over the artificial.
The teahouse is usually set in a garden intended to evoke the remote mountain
hermitage of a Chinese landscape. Guests approach by a stone pathway, which
causes them to slow down and concentrate on their surrounding. After washing at
a stone water basin, they crawl through a small wooden door, symbolically
shedding all social distinctions. The i nside is dimly lit and bare except for
the tokonoma, a raised alcove with an irregularly shaped post, usually
containing a hanging scroll.
A teahouse generally has
round posts and beams, fitted to each other and sitting on rocks, so that the
whole building seems to be growing out of the ground. I peeled Eastern white
cedar logs, kerfed them to control checking, and assembled the frame using
traditional joinery. I tried to use local and recycled materials as much as
possible. The roof tiles are about 60 years old and were covered with lichens.
I cut the cherry post for the tokonoma in my yard and then spent considerable
time polishing it. Much of the other wood is saved from various jobs. The walls
are a sandwich of 1/2" OSB and Styrofoam insulation, grooved into the posts,
covered with vinyl s tucco. The high ceiling and the verandah with glass doors
on two sides are not really traditional in a teahouse, but I wanted to make the
interior seem larger, and to open it up to the outside. In traditional Japanese
architecture, the verandah, or engawa, acts as a tran sitional space, or bridge
between inside and out.
You can sit inside with
all the doors open, and listen to the rain or the sound of the creek below. I
have seen raccoon, deer, and foxes, and you can watch the full moon rise above
the hills on the other side of the creek. I also tried to insulate the bui lding
and weatherstrip it so the owner could use it in the winter, to sit inside and
look at the snow. I wanted to capture the feeling of a traditional teahouse,
which provides a kind of sacred space, free from ordinary concerns and in
harmony with its na tural surroundings. I also wanted to make something that
would respond to the needs of the client and fit the site, using ordinary
materials as much as possible. I am pleased with how it came out, but the whole
process took much longer than I anticipated, so I didn't make much money. I now
see why in Japan, authentic traditional teahouses are among the most expensive
buildings in the world per square foot.
The Details
| Project Category: |
Non-residential A |
| Timber Frame Company: |
Daiku Woodworking, 21122 Park Hall Road, Boonsboro, MD 21713. Tel 301-432-6396.
Fax: 301-432-4722. Email:
welshwex@myactv.net
| Designer and Builder: |
Peter Wechsler, Daiku Woodworking |
| Owner: |
Marilyn Shaw |
| Location: |
Cabin John, Maryland |
| Gross Floor Area: |
72 square feet interior, 54 square feet verandah |
| Cost: |
$175 per square foot |
| Framing Materials: |
Eastern white cedar and Port Orford cedar
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| Enclosure System: |
sandwich of l/2" OSB and 1/2" Styrofoam insulation, between posts
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Click to enlarge






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