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Niseko's Architectural Melting Pot: From Rustic Lodges to Global Design Showcase
12 Nov
Summary
- Niseko, Japan's most international ski resort, has evolved from basic lodges to a showcase of cross-cultural design
- Homes blend modern Japanese, Scandinavian, Alpine, and American mountain lodge styles
- Leading architects like Kengo Kuma and Shigeru Ban now design homes and estates in Niseko

As of November 2025, Niseko, Japan's most international ski resort, has undergone a remarkable architectural transformation. Once a destination known for its basic lodges and unimaginative concrete buildings, Niseko has now become a showcase of cross-cultural design.
The resort's homes now blend a patchwork of styles, including the pared-back geometry and strength of modern Japanese houses, the soft, timbered intimacy of Scandinavian interiors, the steep-roofed chic of Alpine chalets, and the rugged scale of American mountain lodges. This architectural evolution has been driven by the influx of global buyers, who have raised expectations and budgets over the past three decades.
In the mid-2010s, leading Japanese architects such as Kengo Kuma and Shigeru Ban began designing individual houses and setting design plans for new estates in Niseko, adding prestige and injecting traditional Japanese principles back into the mix. Estates like Odin Hills, developed by Nicolas Gontard and his partners, have become the main platform for Niseko's larger, more innovative homes, with amenities like spas, pools, and dining facilities.




