buried souvenir shop on japanese shoreline reflects on tourism, land, and memory

Naoshi Kondo buries a souvenir shop in Atami’s sandy beach

 

Buried Souvenir Shop is a temporary commercial structure designed by Naoshi Kondo as part of the ATAMI ART GRANT 2025, supported by Pasona Art Now. Located directly on the sandy beach of Atami, Japan, the project reinterprets the familiar typology of the souvenir shop by partially embedding it in the ground.

 

The installation operates as a functioning retail space while simultaneously serving as a spatial study of tourism’s relationship to land and memory. Its tilted form is half-buried in the sand, recalling the act of concealing and revealing objects, a gesture drawn from childhood play at the beach. Through this gesture, the project transforms an everyday commercial building into an architectural exploration of perception and site.

all images courtesy of Naoshi Kondo

 

 

Buried Souvenir Shop merges commerce and installation art

 

Inside, the shop sells real souvenirs, but its orientation and placement make the surrounding landscape part of the visitor experience. The ocean is framed through a single large opening, turning the view itself into a component of the retail environment. Constructed under temporary-building regulations and assembled directly on-site, the project merges pragmatic and conceptual objectives. By situating a working shop within the shifting terrain of the beach, designer Naoshi Kondo questions conventional boundaries between architecture and land use, tourism and place-making, commerce and installation art.

Buried Souvenir Shop by Naoshi Kondo, part of the ATAMI ART GRANT 2025

the shop’s tilted form appears half-buried in the sand

the structure recalls the childhood act of hiding and uncovering objects

the project functions as both a retail space and spatial research

 

project info:

 

name: Buried Souvenir Shop – ATAMI ART GRANT 2025
designer: Naoshi Kondo

location: Atami beach, Japan

supported by: Pasona art now

 

 

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: christina vergopoulou | designboom

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