Featuring world renowned celebrity chef akira back lumi is an energetic and upscale rooftop experience serving modern japanese fare and sushi accompanied by handcrafted libations in a vividly unique atmosphere.
Japanese roof tops.
To add a japanese touch to the design tax architects opted for blackened wood beams using the traditional japanese technique shou sugi ban.
Bring your own food and drink or grab something from the neighboring starbucks and relax on the wooden decking or on one of the loungers sprinkled around the space.
At fuji kindergarten outside tokyo kids make the most of a magical environment designed just for them.
Metal roofing materials such as metal shingles and standing seam are most popular because they avoid difficult maintenance and access down the line.
A grill with orange crushes and fat burgers the cavalier resort complex is coming this spring.
The roof of the hall of supreme harmony in the forbidden city is the best example.
Thick wooden beams scale two storeys to support the.
The roof of their oval shaped school designed by tokyo based firm tezuka architects is an endless playground and trees grow right through classrooms.
Famed for it s trippy kaleidoscope entrance on the corner of omotesando and meiji dori the rooftop of the tokyu plaza building is also a marvel of modern urban design.
Zǒu shòu or crouching beasts 蹲獸 蹲兽.
Resting hill roofs resting hill or xie shan roofs 歇山顶 xiēshāndǐng with two curving sides were second in importance to hip roofs.
They were mainly used for important halls temples gardens and other official buildings.
The second roof is visible only from under the eaves and is therefore called a.
The acros fukuoka prefectural hall is perhaps japan s pioneering green roof building designed by emilio ambasz who is himself a pioneering green architect.
A 500 seat beachfront patio.
Mansard roofs create extra space but they can be a framing nightmare.
Yán shòu or walking beasts 走獸 走兽.
A rooftop japanese peruvian restaurant with a solarium.
The hidden roof 野屋根 noyane is a type of roof widely used in japan both at buddhist temples and shinto shrines it is composed of a true roof above and a second roof beneath permitting an outer roof of steep pitch to have eaves of shallow pitch jutting widely from the walls but without overhanging them.