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keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium

Posted on September 3, 2025 by admin

GAKU poni: a Self-Sustaining Aquarium Ecosystem for Your Home

 

GAKU poni, designed by Keisuke Hatakenaka Architects Studio, reinterprets aquaponics as an indoor furniture piece. It combines a self-sustaining ecosystem with a design aesthetic that resembles a framed landscape painting. The system integrates fish farming and hydroponics, a method known as aquaponics.

 

This closed-loop system operates by using microorganisms to break down waste from fish. This waste serves as nourishment for plants, which in turn purify the water before it is returned to the fish tank. This process is designed to balance productivity with environmental sustainability, making it suitable for areas with limited water or soil.

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
all images by Kenichi Sukegawa

 

 

Keisuke Hatakenaka reinterprets aquaponics as a furniture piece

 

GAKU poni is a compact, vertical unit consisting of an aquarium and plant beds. The design is intended to make the symbiotic relationship between plants and fish a visual element of the living space. The upper section features a shallow, elongated cylindrical aquarium for goldfish, a shape chosen to accommodate the fish’s preference for horizontal movement. Grown fish can be transferred by removing silicone caps on either side of the tank.

 

Water from the fish tank, containing waste, overflows into the plant beds below. These beds are filled with hydro-balls, which provide a surface for the microorganisms that decompose the waste. The purified water then overflows into a lower water tank and is circulated back to the aquarium by a pump. The unit also includes internally illuminated lighting on the top layer, which functions as both a design element and a light source to promote plant photosynthesis. Keisuke Hatakenaka Architects Studio reinterprets aquaponics as a piece of functional furniture, allowing for a visual appreciation of the natural processes within the system.

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
the work combines the principles of fish farming and hydroponics

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
GAKU poni is a self-contained aquaponics unit

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
the goldfish tank is shaped for the fish’s horizontal movement

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
drain pipe connecting the aquarium and plant bed

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
details of the pump section

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
details of the return pipe section

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
each power cord is inserted into and secured by the grooves carved into the frame

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
water flows from the fish tank to the plants below

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
GAKU poni is a piece of furniture that is also a functional ecosystem

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
the unit includes integrated lighting for the plants

keisuke hatakenaka builds fish farming aquarium doubling as living landscape painting
diagram of water circulating repeatedly through the aquarium → plant bed → water tank → pump → aquarium

 

project info:

 

name: GAKU poni
designer: Keisuke Hatakenaka Architects Studio | @keisukehatakenaka

producer: Yuji Nukui /NUKUI KIKAKU
photographer: Kenichi Sukegawa

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

Posted in Architecture and Design

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