
North gable of the Minka House in the Bamboo Garden
Minka House
Royal Botanic Gardens Kew
In February 2001 the McCurdy team were
called in by Kew to assess, repair and erect a Japanese “Minka”
House. In addition to woodworking expertise the project required thatching,
mud walling and earth flooring The timber-framed structure was in a container,
onboard a ship and bound for Southampton Docks having been dismantled at
its original site near the city of Okazaki on the southern coast of central
Japan. The Minka house was the centrepiece of Japan 2001 in the UK, under
the auspices of which many events were held around the UK celebrating Japanese
culture and the links between Japan and Britain.
North gable and West elevation
Minka houses were the standard dwellings
for most ordinary Japanese people until the mid twentieth century. Japanese
friends have advised us that the word Minka means “folk” as
in vernacular house. The Minka of Japan vary from region to region and from
mountain to plain. The project was jointly organised by of RBG Kew and the
Japan Minka Re-use and Recycle Association (JAMRA).
South Gable
On the frame’s arrival at Kew,
Peter McCurdy set about the task of sorting through the many timbers and
analysing them. Work began on the repairs to the timber frame that were
required prior to the erection of the building by the McCurdy team. When
the site had been prepared the timbers were taken from a temporary workshop
at Kew to the site in Kew’s Bamboo Garden and the erection process
began. The McCurdy team was joined for eight days by a master carpenter
and his assistant from Japan and worked jointly with them on the erection
of the frame. The two professional Japanese carpenters were accompanied
by a small band of JAMRA members who also assisted in the work. All of us
who shared in the experience enjoyed it immensely and were reminded of the
true understanding that exists between crafts people even without a common
language.
Verge detail,
showing pole rafters, bamboo battens and thatch
On the veranda,
North East corner

Internal roof structure
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