Before After Japanese Renovation Show | FULL › |

The camera pans slowly over a dark, cluttered kitchen. Fluorescent lights flicker over peeling laminate. The wooden engawa (veranda) is warped, letting in cold drafts. A single, sooty ceiling beam—the nageshi —groans under the weight of old electrical wires.

“Enter our Daiku (Master Carpenter), Sato-san. A man who believes a house has a soul. His mission: not to erase the old, but to let the light back in.” before after japanese renovation show

The camera glides. The kitchen is now open, but framed by the original exposed mud walls ( tsuchikabe ). The floor is polished tamondo stone, heated from below. Where the dark hallway once ended, a sliding shoji screen has been replaced by a single sheet of musou glass—framing the garden moss like a living scroll painting. The camera pans slowly over a dark, cluttered kitchen

Kishō Kaisei (Revive the Old, Know the New) A single, sooty ceiling beam—the nageshi —groans under

“We did not renovate a house. We reminded a family how to bow to their own threshold.”