inspired by the japanese engawa, a new installation opens at accra's limbo museum
Briefly

inspired by the japanese engawa, a new installation opens at accra's limbo museum
"With this installation for the Limbo Museum, the team at TAELON7 draws from the Japanese concept of engawa, a transitional zone that mediates interior space and the outdoors. In residential architecture, this threshold supports informal social life, providing a place to sit, pause, and observe the environment beyond the house."
"Steel profiles form rectangular frames that hold woven strips cut from salvaged billboard material. The panels create surfaces that filter light and air while maintaining visual connection with the cultivated ground all around."
"Limbo Engawa occupies a concrete structure in Accra left deliberately incomplete. Floors and columns define a framework that remains open on all sides, allowing vegetation, air, and sound to move through the building."
The Limbo Museum in Accra, Ghana, features a new architectural installation called Limbo Engawa, developed by TAELON7 in partnership with Art Omi. The project reinterprets the traditional Japanese engawa—a transitional threshold between interior and exterior spaces—through a modular system of steel frames and woven panels made from salvaged billboard material. Positioned within the museum's deliberately incomplete concrete structure, the installation creates gathering spaces that filter light and air while maintaining visual and physical connection with the surrounding landscape. The intervention transforms the skeletal building into functional areas for social interaction while preserving the open, unfinished character of the original architecture.
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