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ochimune-zukuri 落ち棟造 | ||||||
KEY WORD : architecture / folk dwellings | ||||||
A design incorporating a projection from a major building with a roof ridge (*mune 棟), lower than that of the building to which it is appended. Widely found in Edo period vernacular structure *minka 民家. The location of the projecting element or wing (called ochimune 落ち棟, or sometimes ochiyane 落屋根) may vary: for instance, in Tondabayashi 富田林, Osaka, the ochimune was a projection to the rear of the omoya 主屋 at the *shimote 下手 end of the house, constituting an extention of the earthfloored curea (*doma 土間), and was used as a kitchen (suijiba 炊事場). Often an ochimune was appended to the gable end of the main structure, and where it was found at the *kamite 上手 end of the building it usually accommodated a reception suite with shoin style *shoin-zukuri 書院造 elements. In the case of town houses (*machiya 町家) with a kamite ochimune , the ochimune was often shallower in cross section than the omoya, generating a small court or garden between it and the street. This combination of tsuboniwa 坪庭 and ochimune was a common feature of large machiya with developed reception suites, and of Edo period inns *honjin 本陣. | ||||||
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