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A Clubhouse That Balances High-Performance Driving and Luxury

12.11.25 | By
A Clubhouse That Balances High-Performance Driving and Luxury

THE MAGARIGAWA CLUB Clubhouse is nestled into the forested hills of Chiba, Japan as a study in managed contradiction – a private driving club’s hospitality venue where Joyce Wang Studio choreographed the psychological arc of high-performance driving into architectural form. Automotive culture demands contradictions that few spaces manage to resolve – the heightened alertness required for performance driving exists in direct opposition to the restoration needed afterward. The studio approached this duality not as a problem to solve but as a spatial dynamic to balance, creating a 18-bay clubhouse where the architecture itself performed the transition between adrenaline and recovery.

A modern lounge area with green sofas, a white marble coffee table, wooden floors, and sunlight streaming through vertical window panels.

The design is operated through an appreciation for negative space and the ephemeral, drawing from traditional Japanese interior principles to structure the experience. Reinterpreted shoji screens function as both physical and psychological markers throughout the journey, carving intimate pockets within the expansive volumes while casting shifting light patterns across timber and stone surfaces. This manipulation of light became the primary tool for signaling transitions – bright, precise illumination in pre-drive zones give way to softer, filtered atmospheres in the post-drive spaces.

Modern living room with green velvet chairs, a white marble coffee table, wooden side tables, and potted plants on a wood floor, lit by natural sunlight.

A modern bar area with green barstools, a marble countertop, wooden paneling, and sunlight streaming through tall windows.

A modern restaurant interior with soft lighting, wooden floors, cushioned seating, a round paper lamp, and set tables, viewed through a window with blinds.

A modern restaurant dining area with wooden tables and chairs, set for service, large floor-to-ceiling windows, and natural light streaming in.

A yellow sports car drives on a racetrack near a painted stop line, with a steep, terraced hillside and trees in the background.

The pit lane lounge, check-in, and changing areas maintain an intentional clarity that mirrors the focused preparation required before taking the course. Advanced technology and ergonomic layouts establish a visual language borrowed directly from luxury automotive interiors. The timber ribbing creates intricate ceiling textures throughout these zones evoking the technical sophistication of performance vehicles while remaining firmly rooted in material authenticity.

Sunlight casts striped shadows through slatted walls and columns onto a tiled walkway beneath a modern architectural structure.

“It was an honor to work with THE MAGARIGAWA CLUB to shape a unique and holistic resort experience for their members – one where performance and pause exist in seamless dialogue,” says Wang. “We are so proud of the destination we have created together and we are really excited to share it with our community.”

Sunlight casts striped shadows on the ground through a slatted overhang, with modern building walls and a terrace visible in the background.

The onsen, spa, and infinity pool orient themselves toward panoramic views of both the driving course and surrounding forested hills, positioning guests to observe the landscape they had just traversed from an altered psychological state. The material palette shifts in subtle ways – the same light timber and stone surfaces that felt sharp and energizing in the pit lane are presented as warm and grounding.

Infinity pool overlooking green forested hills at sunset, with part of a modern building on the right side of the image.

To learn more about THE MAGARIGAWA CLUB Clubhouse by Joyce Wang Studio, please visit joycewangstudio.com.

Photography by Common Studio.

Leo Lei translates his passion for minimalism into his daily-updated blog Leibal. In addition, you can find uniquely designed minimalist objects and furniture at the Leibal Store.