Nakagin Capsule Tower in Tokyo Is a Claustrophobe's Nightmare
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Beside an elevated highway in Tokyo's Ginza district is what looks
like a huge pile of front-loading washing machines. The 13-story
structure is Nakagin Capsule Tower, a residential building consisting of 144 cubic pods.
Built in 1972, the tower is a rare example of the Metabolism movement
in Japanese architecture, which prized module-based designs in which
individual units could be replaced.
Each of the 144 Nakagin capsules is its own 8-by-7-by-12-foot
apartment. Designed for single salarymen, the units are equipped with a
stove, refrigerator, TV, reel-to-reel tape deck, and telephone. The
bathroom, which resembles an airplane lavatory, is three steps from the
bed. A table folds down from the wall for dining and work.
Though tiny apartments are standard in Tokyo, the Nakagin capsules
did not herald the dawn of pod-based urban living. Its cubes, intended
for a 25-year life span, have never been replaced due to prohibitive
costs. The building suffers from water leaks, has asbestos in its
original air-conditioning system, and is mostly unoccupied. The threat
of demolition is tempered only by outraged members of the architecture
community who want to see the rare Metabolist structure preserved.
If you'd like to experience a Nakagin capsule before it's lost
forever, one of the units is currently being rented on Airbnb for $30 per night.
Sleep cramped in concrete:
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