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The Chapel in the Forest: When Architecture Borrows from the Body

On a strange, organic structure outside Kyoto, and what it asks of us.

By Henrik Vaal · March 21, 2026 · 9 min read
The Chapel in the Forest: When Architecture Borrows from the Body

The path is paved with flat stones the colour of bone. The forest is full of mist. You expect a building, and instead you find something closer to a creature, settled on the moss as if it has always been there.

The chapel is not large. It seats perhaps thirty. The walls are curved, almost biological. The light enters through three round openings that feel less like windows and more like eyes.

It is the kind of architecture that refuses to be photographed well. You have to be inside it.

“The best buildings teach you how to be in a room.”

We will leave the last word to the reader. The questions below are not rhetorical. They are an invitation.

Questions to sit with

Before you comment, consider:

  1. 01

    Is biomorphic architecture honest, or is it costume?

  2. 02

    What do we lose when a building is designed for the camera first?

The Conversation

Join the discussion

This is a journal, not a comments section. Share a building you love, a tradition from your region, or a memory a room once gave you. All voices, all cultures, all perspectives are welcome here.

  • Anya Petrov
    Tbilisi, Georgia
    3 days ago

    Read this twice. The bit about the doorway feeling like a welcome — my grandmother's house in Sighnaghi has exactly that, a low stone arch you have to dip your head under, and you arrive in the courtyard already softened. I don't think she would have called it architecture. But it is.

  • Joaquín Ribera
    Mexico City
    2 days ago

    Writing this from a rooftop in Coyoacán. The neighbour's bougainvillea is doing more for the street than anything the developers put up last year. I think you're right that the older traditions were generous, but I'd push back gently — generosity is also a choice we have to keep making now, and most of the new towers here aren't choosing it.

  • Mei Tanaka
    Kyoto
    yesterday

    There's a word in carpentry here, kigoroshi, for crushing wood fibres so the joint swells back tight over time. I thought of it reading your paragraph on continuity. The good buildings are the ones that include the future in the calculation.

  • Amadou Diallo
    Dakar
    yesterday

    If you ever get the chance to be in Djenné for the replastering of the Great Mosque, go. The whole town climbs the walls. Children carry water. Old men direct from the shade. The building is never finished, which is the entire point. Thank you for writing this with care.

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