geometric triskele form rises from the earth as hajime yoshida’s shrine in japan

Hajime Yoshida installs 3d triskele form in japanese village

 

Hajime Yoshida Architecture completes Shrine of Triskele in Toga, a mountain village in Toyama Prefecture, Japan, a structure conceived as a meditative land art project that occupies a clearing in the forest where the ground once held a river. The three-dimensional triskele form emerges at the center, rising as a geometric symbol of strength, while its outer skin blends with the earth, recalling the pit dwellings of Japan’s Jomon period. The elements create a place where visitors can look up at the framed sky, listen to the surrounding forest, and quietly reflect in nature.

images courtesy of Hajime Yoshida Architecture

 

 

spiraling into nature for a quiet moment in the woods

 

The chosen site at the foot of the mountains is defined by dense trees and a wide depression at its center. Vegetation grows thickly, reaching upward in unison toward the open sky above. Within this hollow, Japanese architect Hajime Yoshida introduces a structure that mirrors the forces of the landscape, earth rising and swirling, converging to support itself while carving out a void of light above. The small interior space does not stand apart from the forest but connects to it by offering a transition point between the ground and the sky.

 

The triskele itself is interpreted here as a spiraling, three-dimensional geometry that embodies continuity and interconnection. Its placement anchors the clearing as a rising center, a point of orientation, and a vessel for quiet human presence in the midst of natural cycles. By shaping its outer surface to sink into the soil, the project echoes ancient forms of dwelling that once grew out of the earth.

 

Visitors to the Shrine of Triskele are invited to sit, listen, and observe this opening in the forest that draws attention to what already exists: the strength of the earth, the vitality of plants, and the passage of time marked by rivers and cherry blossoms.

Hajime Yoshida Architecture completes Shrine of Triskele in Toga

a structure conceived as a meditative land art project

occupying a clearing in the forest where the ground once held a river

the three-dimensional triskele form emerges at the center

a geometric symbol of strength

its outer skin blends with the earth, recalling the pit dwellings of Japan’s Jomon period

the elements create a place where visitors can look up at the framed sky

the chosen site at the foot of the mountains is defined by dense trees and a wide depression at its center

Hajime Yoshida introduces a structure that mirrors the forces of the landscape

 

project info:

 

name: Shrine of Triskele
architect: Hajime Yoshida Architecture | @hajime.yoshida.architecture

location: Toga, Japan

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: thomai tsimpou | designboom

The post geometric triskele form rises from the earth as hajime yoshida’s shrine in japan appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

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