shikorobuki 錣葺
KEY WORD : architecture / general terms
 
Also called shikoroyane 錣屋根. A method of constructing a hip-and-gable roof on separate planes. The gable is constructed so that the front and rear parts clearly end like eaves, over-hanging the independently roofed hips. Thus, there is no continuous roof line flow. The earliest extant example is the Tamamushi miniature shrine *Tamamushi no zushi 玉虫厨子 owned by Houyuuji 法隆寺 (mid-7c) in Nara. During the Edo period a type of shikorobuki was constructed by covering the core of the building with a gable roof and then adding broad aisles or a corridor *hisashi 廂, around the core and covering this separately with pent roofs. Some buildings had the gable part thatched and the hips covered with tile. Other buildings used two separate layers of thatch of differing thicknesses. The latter two methods were used on vernacular dwellings *minka 民家. During the Edo period, some main halls *hondou 本堂, and the kitchen buildings *kuri 庫裡, in large Zen style temples *zenshuuyou 禅宗様, were roofed with shikorobuki. Example: The original structure of Zuiganji Kuri 瑞巖寺庫裡 (1609), Miyagi prefecture.
 


 
REFERENCES:
*yane 屋根
EXTERNAL LINKS: 
  
NOTES
 

(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. No reproduction or republication without written permission.
掲載のテキスト・写真・イラストなど、全てのコンテンツの無断複製・転載を禁じます。