2011/08/25

Western-style residence, the former Iwasaki Family House



This exotic atmospheric house is designed by Josiah Conder. He designed the house based on the Jacobean Style architecture of England, and also Islamic motif was adopted to the house.
The house was built in 1896 for the residence of the Iwasaki Family who was the founder of the Mitsubishi Group. The house was requisitioned by GHQ(Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers) after World war II and it has been released to Japanese Government since 1953.
This is now important cultural assets of japan and it has been opened to public under control of Tokyo Metropolitan Government.

The image was taken by Olympus Pen E-P1 with M. Zuiko Digital 14-45mm 1:3.5-5.6
1/160 f/7.0 ISO200

2011/08/24

The house, remains of prosperity

It is not an image of Hyde Park or Regent's Park in London. The image was taken in the central area of Tokyo.
This house was built in 1917 for the residence of Furukawa Toranosuke who was third generations of the founder of the Furukawa Business Group that made big profit from the copper mine at the Meiji era (1868~1912).
The house was designed by Josiah Conder who was a British architect, and he was called Father of Modern Architecture of Japan.
The house has the European style of garden, designed also by Josiah Conder, beside the Japanese Garden.

Just after World War II, the house was used as a billet for the British Officers of the Allied Forces because it provided them almost similar atmosphere and family-like comfort of their home country.
Currently, the house and its gardens are properties of Japanese Government therefore these are opened to public.

Image was taken by Olympus Pen E-P2 with Voigtlander Nokton 25mm 1:0.95, 1/500 with f5.6, ISO speed 400, Aperture Priority AE, -0.7 of Exposure Bias

2011/08/23

Viscount Aoki's villa in Nasu

The house was built in 1888 as the summer villa for Viscount Aoki Syuzou (青木周蔵) and his wife Elisabeth von Rhade who was a daughter of the nobility of Germany.
The house was designed and built by Baron Matsugasaki Tsumunaga (松ケ崎萬長1858~1921) who studied architectural technology in the Berlin Institute of Technology in 1871.
The house was designated as the Important Cultural Properties of Japan since December 1999, and it has been opened for public as the Aoki Syuzou Memorial Musium.

taken by Olympus Pen E-P2 with Voigtlander Nokton 25mm f0.95,