Layered wire mesh reimagines the Japanese tea Ceremony House
The Wire Mesh Tea Ceremony House by Moriyuki Ochiai Architects presents a reinterpretation of the traditional Japanese tea house through the use of industrial diamond-shaped wire mesh. The project reconsiders the spatial and sensory qualities of the tea ceremony environment by replacing conventional solid enclosures with layered, permeable materials.
Wire mesh is employed as both structure and spatial filter. Its composition of lines and voids allows variations in wire type, thickness, density, and color, producing a wide range of visual and atmospheric effects. These variables influence light transmission, shadow, sightlines, and airflow, positioning the material as an active mediator between space and perception.
Multiple layers of wire mesh are arranged to generate moiré effects, a visual interference pattern created by overlapping grids. This condition produces a shifting, semi-transparent environment in which light is transmitted, reflected, and diffused across the interior. As the viewer moves through the space, the layered mesh installation creates changing optical depth and spatial ambiguity, with light patterns that respond continuously to movement and viewpoint.
all images by Daisuke Shima
Moriyuki Ochiai experiments with Light, material, and movement
The traditional tea house is typically conceived as a contained microcosm intended to heighten awareness and focus. While maintaining this conceptual foundation, the project reframes enclosure through layered transparency rather than solid boundaries. The result is an interior defined by gradations of light and spatial intervals, where enclosure and openness coexist.
By working with light, material layering, and perceptual change, the Wire Mesh Tea Ceremony House by Moriyuki Ochiai Architects explores how contemporary materials can reinterpret cultural architectural typologies. The project positions the tea house as a spatial framework shaped by light, texture, and movement, rather than by fixed form alone.
the tea house is reinterpreted using layered diamond-shaped wire mesh
industrial mesh replaces solid walls in the traditional tea ceremony space
permeable enclosures redefine the sensory boundaries of the tea house
wire mesh functions simultaneously as structure and spatial filter
lines and voids shape light, shadow, and visual depth
variations in mesh density and color create shifting atmospheres
overlapping grids produce a semi-transparent spatial condition
light is transmitted, reflected, and diffused through the mesh layers
the interior changes in response to movement and viewpoint
layered wire mesh generates moiré patterns across the interior
optical depth emerges through the accumulation of mesh layers
transparency is achieved through material layering rather than openness
texture and light shape the atmosphere more than solid form
project info:
name: Wire Mesh Tea Ceremony House
architect: Moriyuki Ochiai Architects | @moriyukiochiai
design team: Moriyuki Ochiai, Jun Ueda, Elena Bourgain
client: Kyowa Industries
wire mesh production: Kyowa Industries | @kyowakogyo_morinaga
constructor: 16build
lighting design: ITL
location: Tokyo, Japan
photographer: Daisuke Shima | @daisuke_shima_photography
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
The post luminous layers of colored wire mesh weave tea ceremony house by moriyuki ochiai appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

