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Woven Grounds

Project by Adneth Marie Kaze @adnethmarie

Okinawa has long stood as a site of resistance against military occupation, a struggle threatening the livelihoods and traditions of Okinawan women. Anchored in local artisans’ generational knowledge, this project is a spatial counter-narrative against the erasure of traditional weaving methods like Bashofu, Yaeyama Jofu, and Ikat Kasuri.

The intervention creates a conceptual dialogue between two forms of weaving: the deliberate geometry of textiles and the wild entanglement of the site’s banyan roots, pandanus, and mangroves. This juxtaposition drives the project’s structural logic. Drawing from textile techniques at a building scale, the bamboo structure uses intricate joinery to adapt responsively to the living jungle.

Featuring a weaving workshop, communal spaces, and dwellings, the masterplan unfolds vertically. The architecture roots into the textured ground, rises through interwoven canopy branches, and emerges above the treeline, offering mountain and ocean views that restore a connection to the landscape.