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  2. Shoin-zukuri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoin-zukuri

    The main reception room is characterized by specific features: a recessed alcove , staggered shelves, built-in desks, and ornate sliding doors. [5] [7] Generally the reception room is covered with wall-to-wall tatami and has square beveled pillars, a coved or coffered ceiling, and wooden shutters to protect the area from rain (雨戸, amado).

  3. Shoin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoin

    Shoin (書院, drawing room or study) is a type of audience hall in Japanese architecture that was developed during the Muromachi period. [2] The term originally meant a study and a place for lectures on the sūtra within a temple, but later it came to mean just a drawing room or study. [3] From this room takes its name the shoin-zukuri style.

  4. Living room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Living_room

    Japanese minimalist interior living room, 19th century. In Western architecture, a living room, also called a lounge room (Australian English [1]), lounge (British English [2]), sitting room (British English [3]), or drawing room, is a room for relaxing and socializing in a residential house or apartment.

  5. How to Design a Drawing Room for Entertaining Guests at Home

    www.aol.com/design-drawing-room-entertaining...

    The earliest known use of the noun drawing room is in the mid-1600s, with the earliest evidence of drawing room appearing in 1635, from a Victorian-era memoir titled Steward's Household Accounts.

  6. List of furniture types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_furniture_types

    An expandable table with chairs. This is a list of furniture types.Furniture can be free-standing or built-in to a building. [1] They typically include pieces such as chairs, tables, storage units, and desks.

  7. Hidari Jingorō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidari_Jingorō

    Hidari Jingorō (左 甚五郎) was a possibly fictitious Japanese artist. Some people and sources state his real name was Itami Toshikatsu. [ 1 ] A Renaissance man , he worked as a sculptor, carpenter, painter, architect, comedian, actor, kōdanshi (rhythmical storyteller) and professor of art.

  8. Sukiya-zukuri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sukiya-zukuri

    In the Azuchi-Momoyama period not only sukiya style but the contrasting shoin-zukuri (書院造) of residences of the warrior class developed. While sukiya was a small space, simple and austere, shoin-zukuri style was that of large, magnificent reception areas, the setting for the pomp and ceremony of the feudal lords.

  9. Capsule hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capsule_hotel

    Capsules in Tokyo Capsule hotel in Warsaw, Poland.The lockers are on the left of the image, while the sleeping capsules are on the right. A capsule hotel (Japanese: カプセルホテル, romanized: kapuseru hoteru), also known in the Western world as a pod hotel, [1] is a type of hotel developed in Japan that features many small, bed-sized rooms known as capsules.