SHINJUKU GYOEMMAE RESIDENCE (ZOOM SHINJUKU GYOEMMAE) designed by KEY OPERATION INC. / ARCHITECTS
At a triangular intersection where Shinjuku's high-rise skyline meets its quieter residential edge, a fifteen-story apartment building wraps itself in a delicate cage of aluminium louvres. Behind the screen, 118 compact and loft-style units, along with a co-working space tucked into the entrance hall, offer a considered answer to dense, contemporary city living.
Lost Villa. Huanglong Island Lighthouse Hotel designed by WJ STUDIO
Perched on the wind-swept edge of Dongjutou Cape, Lost Villa transforms a depopulating island into a destination defined by rock, ridge, and sea. Anchored between three protected reefs and shaped through a principle of minimal intervention, the hotel dissolves the line between architecture and landscape, offering an experience that is as much about geological encounter as it is about hospitality.
ESR YOKOHAMA SACHIURA DC3 designed by TAKATO TAMAGAMI ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN, Ltd.
At Yokohama's waterfront, a distribution warehouse becomes something unexpected: a place of pause. ESR's DC3 pairs sharp edged, wave inspired facades with a glass wrapped lounge that feels like the deck of a ship adrift on Tokyo Bay, proof that even the most functional architecture can hold a moment of quiet wonder.
AMAMI HOUSE - by SAKAI ARCHITECTS
In the subtropical heart of Amami Ōshima, SAKAI ARCHITECTS has completed a quietly radical vision: a fully off-grid house that severs all ties to the national power grid while accommodating a family of four in comfort. Drawing on solar energy, passive ventilation, and a wood-fired sauna powered by construction offcuts, the residence is both a technical experiment and a cultural statement: reanimating the Amamian spirit of yui, or collective cooperation, for an age of environmental uncertainty.
VILLA 49 designed by Kris Lin international Design
Where architecture dissolves into landscape, VILLA 49 redefines villa living through an uncompromising vision of transparency and scale. A borderless acrylic swimming pool channels daylight into once-shadowed depths, while a glass box dining pavilion opens fully to garden and riverside views. Every gesture, from oversized glazing to razor thin detailing, is calibrated in service of one idea: that minimal form can hold the richest experience of nature.

