Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato

Award-winning Designer from Japan

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Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato

Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato

JAPAN

Meet Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato - a powerhouse of good design, creativity and innovation based in Japan. Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato's design journey has been nothing short of spectacular, marked by a tireless pursuit of excellence. This dedication is clearly mirrored in Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato's impressive haul of 5 A' Design Awards that we showcase here. Spanning across categories such as Fine Art, Interior and Architecture, Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato's work stands as a living testament to a steadfast commitment to design excellence, serving as a beacon of inspiration for designers globally. With each project, Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato masterfully blends form and function, crafting designs that are not only aesthetically pleasing but also functional and timeless. This approach underscores Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato's celebration of creativity and an unyielding quest for innovation.

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Aqua Scape the Orangery Version Whole Plastic Architecture by Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
Aqua Scape the Orangery Version Whole Plastic Architecture
Aqua Scape the Orangery Version Whole Plastic Architecture
This is the second version of Aqua scape. The first-version had completed as the first prototype of Whole Plastic Architecture. Aqua scape was a soft and boneless architecture. Aqua-scape The Orangery version has a double skin system although the first version was a single skin. If it is called that the first-version was boneless like a jellyfish, it is been able to say the Orangery version is like a small shrimp because it is wrapped by transparent soft shell. The first-version of Aqua scape in Japan 2006 was floating on the water, however this is floating on the grass.
Aqua Scape the Orangery Version
Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
853
17.07K
Porous Manifold Japanese Tearoom by Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
Porous Manifold Japanese Tearoom
Porous Manifold Japanese Tearoom
This is a temporary Japanese tearoom exhibited in Echigo-tsumari Art Triennale 2018 and has a nested structure with two-tatami space embedded in ten foot square. In this exhibition, architects were asked to respond to the theme of how to overcome the concept of homogeneous space that was dominant in the 20th century. The skeleton was designed using the random pattern which was called Voronoi Division to distort homogeneous space. And it was proposed that the architecture with a large number of holes what could be opened and closed as needed to communicate with the outside like a living thing.
Porous Manifold
Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
1.02K
20.4K
Continuous Plate House 2.0 Residence Renovation by Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
Continuous Plate House 2.0 Residence Renovation
Continuous Plate House 2.0 Residence Renovation
This house has been renovated mainly on the first floor because 18 years the completion. The renovation required that the existing kitchen area, consisting of the kitchen, breakfast corner, and food storage, be changed to a space that can be used for various purposes. In order to respond to this demand, the food storage and corridors were eliminated, making the entire space one room wide, and the sink was changed from a wall-mounted type to an island type, making it a more space centered on the kitchen unit. It has been reborn as a calm and cozy room because it is covered with a wooden finish.
Continuous Plate House 2.0
Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
258
5.17K
The House for Contemporary Art Residence by Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
The House for Contemporary Art Residence
The House for Contemporary Art Residence
This home was designed for an art appreciator and amateur artist who wanted a “house like an art museum”. Planned with careful consideration for air circulation as well as for the harsh, snowy climate of the Japan Sea coast, the structure is composed of white boxes of varying scale that frame spaces like pictures. One of the main concepts is 'Seamless Spatial Composition'. You can circulate through the spaces in this home looking at the owner’s collection of artwork just as if you were passing through galleries in a museum.
The House for Contemporary Art
Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
955
19.12K
Artificial Topography Installation by Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
Artificial Topography Installation
Artificial Topography Installation
Big Furniture Like a Cave This is the award-winning project won the Grand Prize of Art in Container International Competition. My idea is to hollow out the volume inside a container in order to build amorphous space like a cave. It is made of only plastic material. About 1000 sheets of the soft plastic material of 10-mm thickness were cut down in contour line form and were laminated like stratum. This is not only art but also big furniture. Because all the portions are soft like a sofa, and person who enter into this space can relax by finding the place suitable for the form of its own body.
Artificial Topography
Ryumei Fujiki and Yukiko Sato
10.82K
216.41K

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