Schemata Architects

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café 

Jo Nagasaka + Schemata Architects

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

ARCHITECTS
Jo Nagasaka, Schemata Architects

CONSTRUCTION
Hiranokengyo

STRUCTURAL CONSULTING
Ladderup Architects

LIGHTING
Endo Lighting Corporation

WRITER
Rikako Sho

SIGNAGE DESIGN
Moeko Yamaguchi

KITCHEN DESIGNER
Fukushima Galile

PHOTOGRAPHS
Yurika Kono

AREA
197 M²

LOCATION
Hakodate, Japan

YEAR
2024

CATEGORY
Coffee Shop, Renovation

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

Walking on the streets of Hakodate, one sees brick warehouses, Western-style buildings, and storehouses that give a sense of the city’s history as a port town open to the world.

At the same time, one encounters many buildings featuring curious blends of Japanese and Western styles, with the first floor in Japanese and the second floor designed in Western style.

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono
Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

Most buildings in the city are wood constructions, and the Western elements are limited to facade decorations.

Sensyuan is in Motomachi, where many buildings are eclectic blends of Japanese and Western styles, and has long been a popular confectionery shop among the locals.

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono
Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

It is a Japanese-style wooden building with a storehouse at its center, and the front façade remains one of Hakodate’s landmarks for many years.

In planning the store renovation, we decided to add a café where customers who came to buy Japanese confectionaries could drop by for a coffee break.

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono
Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

We converted a warehouse previously used for storage and packing into a café and renovated the existing store and office.

During the process, we noticed a Western element, a small amount of brick laid out on the exterior of the building. So, we extended the brick to the interior of the existing wooden building, used it to cover the earthen floor, and raised it in places to create counters, benches, and other necessary furniture.

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono
Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

The raised brickwork is cut based on the shaku module (approximately 30.3 cm) of traditional Japanese wooden construction, and the cross-section of the cut brickwork appears at the edges.

Our design aimed to blend brick, a Western material, with the existing Japanese architecture as part of the composition, creating a shop that blends the Japanese and Western styles not only on the surface but throughout the interior.

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono
Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono

We proposed a new way of blending Japanese and Western styles by using brick, a material familiar to Hakodate residents, while retaining the appearance of a traditional Japanese house and the front of a long-established Japanese confectionary shop.

We hope it will remain a popular confectionery among the locals for many years to come.

Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
© Yurika Kono


Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
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Hakodate Sensyuan Sohonke Café
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Schemata Architects
T +81 3 67125514
Schemata Architects
3-31-5 Sendagaya Shibuya-Ku Tokyo 151-0051, Japan