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japanese_architects.xml
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japanese_architects.xml
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<title>Hiroshi Hara (architect)</title>
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<timestamp>2009-07-30T20:59:38Z</timestamp>
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<comment>Add 2 categories</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">{{BLPunsourced|date=January 2009}}
{{otherpeople|Hiroshi Hara}}
[[Image:KyotoStation2a.jpg|thumb|Kyoto Station, Kyoto, Japan]]
[[Image:Umeda Sky building.jpg|thumb|Umeda Sky Building, Osaka]]
'''Hiroshi Hara''' (原広司, ''Hara Hiroshi''; (born 1936) is a [[Japanese people|Japanese]] [[architect]] and [[author]] on architecture. His major works, including [[Kyoto Station]], the [[Umeda Sky Building]] in [[Osaka, Osaka|Osaka]], the Yamato International building in [[Tokyo]], the [[Sapporo Dome]] in [[Hokkaidō]], and other important structures in [[Japan]], have earned many awards. With a [[doctorate]] in [[engineering]], he was a [[professor]] at the [[University of Tokyo]] until 1997, and has held an emeritus position since that time.
==Education==
Hiroshi Hara graduated from the [[University of Tokyo]] with a BA in 1959, and subsequently earned an MA in 1961 and a Ph.D. in 1964 also from the University of Tokyo. He became an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Architecture of the University of Tokyo in 1964 and an Associate Professor at the Institute of Industrial Science at the University of Tokyo in 1969. Attended Harvard University's Summer Seminar, 1968. In 1982, he became a Professor at the Institute of Industrial Science at the University of Tokyo, and in 1997, a Professor Emeritus at the University of Tokyo.
==Publications==
Hiroshi Hara is not only known as an architect but also as an author of theoretical essays on architecture and cities, amongst others the essay "Discrete City"<ref>Discrete City: Hiroshi Hara</ref>.
==Completed==
*Yamato International, [[Ota, Tokyo]], 1987
*Kenju Park 'Forest House', Nakaniida, Miyagi Prefecture, 1987
*Lida City Museum, Lida, Nagano Prefecture, 1988
*[[Umeda Sky Building]], Kita-ku, [[Osaka]], 1993
*Miyagi Prefectural Library, Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, 1997
*[[Kyoto Station|Kyoto Station Complex]], Shimogyo-ku, [[Kyoto]], 1997
*[[Sapporo Dome]], [[Sapporo]], [[Hokkaidō]], 2001
*[[University of Tokyo]], Komaba Campus II, [[Tokyo]], 2002
*Aizu Gakuho Junior and Senior High School, [[Aizuwakamatsu]], [[Fukushima Prefecture]], 2007
==References==
<references/>
{{Refbegin}}
* Discrete City: Hiroshi Hara, Architects - HARA
* Hiroshi Hara, The Floating World of Architecture, H. Hara, B. Bognar, John Wiley & Sons; 2001
{{Refend}}
[[Category:Japanese architects]]
[[Category:1936 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
{{Japan-architect-stub}}
[[es:Hiroshi Hara]]
[[ja:原広司]]
[[sv:Hiroshi Hara]]
[[zh:原廣司]]</text>
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<page>
<title>Toyo Ito</title>
<id>1265795</id>
<revision>
<id>310689540</id>
<timestamp>2009-08-29T09:34:16Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<username>Chreod</username>
<id>7335409</id>
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<minor/>
<comment>mainly grammatical changes</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">[[Image:Toyo Ito.jpg|thumb|Toyo Ito]]
[[Image:SendaiMediatheque.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Sendai Mediatheque, a building in [[Sendai, Miyagi|Sendai]] designed by Toyo Ito]]
[[Image:Mikimoto Ginza2.JPG|thumb|Mikimoto, [[Ginza]], [[Tokyo]], [[Japan]], 2005]]
'''Toyo Ito''' (伊東豊雄, ''Itō Toyo'o''; 1941-) is a [[Japanese people|Japanese]] [[architect]] known for creating extremely [[conceptual architecture]], in which he seeks to simultaneously express the physical and [[virtual]] "worlds". He is a leading exponent of architecture that addresses the contemporary notion of a "simulated" city.
considered "one of the world's most innovative and influential architects." ([[Designboom]]).
==Background and education==
Ito was born in Seoul, South Korea (at the time, Japan had colonized the country). Ito graduated from [[Tokyo University]]'s, [[Department of Architecture, Tokyo University|Department of Architecture]] in 1965.
==Career==
After working for Kiyonori Kikutake Architect and Associates from 1965 to 1969, in 1971 he started his own studio in [[Tokyo, Japan|Tokyo]], named Urbot ("Urban Robot").
In 1979, the studio name was changed to [[Toyo Ito & Associates, Architects]]. Throughout his early career Ito constructed numerous private house projects that expressed aspects of urban life in Japan. His most remarkable early conceptual contributions were made through projects of this scale. See ''[[White U]]'' (1976) and ''[[Silver Hut]]'' (1984).
With the Pao for the Tokyo Nomad Girl projects in 1985 and 1989, Ito presented a vision of the life of an Urban Nomad, illustrating human life during the [[bubble economy]] period in Japan.
''[[Tower of Winds]]'' (1986) and ''[[Egg of Winds]]'' (1991) are interactive landmarks in public spaces, resulting from a creative confrontation with contemporary technical possibilities.
Toyo Ito is known for helping to raise talented architects in the younger generation. Architects who worked for his office include [[Kazuyo Sejima]] and Ryue Nishizawa ([[SANAA (firm)|SANAA]]), Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham (KDa), Katsuya Fukushima, Makoto Yokomizo, and Akihisa Hirata.
==Critical vision==
[[Image:Tower of Winds2.jpg|thumb|Tower of Winds]]
The work of Toyo Ito is often said to take inspiration from philosophers such as [[Munesuke Mita]] and [[Gilles Deleuze]].
Through small house projects, Ito has defined architecture as "clothing" for urban dwellers, particularly in the contemporary Japanese metropolis. This theme revolves around the equilibrium between the private life and the metropolitan, "public" life of an individual.
The current architecture of Toyo Ito expands on his findings from works during the postmodern period, aggressively exploring the potentials of new forms. In doing so, he seeks to find new spatial conditions that manifest the philosophy of borderless beings.
==Exhibitions==
The work of Toyo Ito has been exhibited widely.
In 1991 Ito used 130 video projectors to simulate the urban environment of Tokyo for the ''Visions of Japan'' exhibition at The [[Victoria and Albert Museum]] in [[London]]. In 2000, the ''Vision and Reality'' at The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art also became a traveling exhibition. Toyo Ito similarly exploited the effect of video projection as a medium with which to exhibit architecture. In the ''Blurring Architecture'' exhibition, initiated at the Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum in Aachen and traveling to four other cities (Tokyo, Antwerp, Auckland, and Wellington between 1999-2001), Toyo Ito attempted to reveal the ''virtual'' presence of architecture in the human mind.
Toyo Ito designed the [[Berlin-Tokyo/Tokyo-Berlin]] Exhibition (2006) at the [[Neue Nationalgalerie]], [[Berlin]]. The design featured a smooth, undulating landscape that occupied almost the entirety of the museum's main exhibition space. This exhibition, in collaboration with the Mori Art Museum, was one of the largest undertakings in the museum's history. A major retrospective of Ito's work was shown at the Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery in 2006 as ''Toyo Ito: The New "Real" in Architecture.''
==List of works==
* 1991 - [[Yatsushiro Municipal Museum]]
* 1994 - Old People's Home in [[Yatsushiro]]
* January 26, 2001 - A "unique multi-purpose public cultural centre" in the city of [[Sendai, Miyagi|Sendai]], [[Sendai Mediatheque]]: this stunning complex accommodates a mixed program of library, art gallery, audio-visual library, film studio and café. It was a competition winning scheme chosen from amongst 235 competing proposals. [http://www.actar.com/index.php?option=com_dbquery&task=ExecuteQuery&qid=2&idllibre=2360&lang=en Sendai Mediatheque (Actar, Barcelona)]
* 2002 - Commissioned to design a temporary pavilion adjacent to the [[Serpentine Gallery]], in [[Hyde Park, London|Hyde Park]], [[London]]
* 2002 - [[Bruges]] pavilion
* 2004 [[Matsumoto Performing Art Center]], Matsumoto
* 2004 TOD's Omotesando Building, Tokyo
* 2006 First Prize "Taichung Opera International Competition" in Taiwan
* 2006 [[VivoCity]] Singapore at HarbourFront
* 2008 [[World Games Stadium]] in [[Kaohsiung]], [[Taiwan]]
* 2008 Villa for Chilean architectural project [[Ochoalcubo]].
* 2009 [http://www.cosasqueverenbarcelona.com/2009/03/edificio-suites-avenue-apartamentos-de.html Suites Avenue Building], [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
* 2009 Water Fountain in [[Pescara]][http://www.teknemedia.net/magazine_detail.html?mId=6398]
* 2009 Torre Fira BCN Building, [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
<gallery>
Image:Nagaoka Lyric Hall 001.jpg|Nagaoka Lyric Hall (1994, [[Nagaoka, Niigata|Nagaoka]])
Image:SendaiMediatheque.jpg|Sendai Mediatheque (2000, [[Sendai]])
Image:Sendaimediatheque.JPG|Sendai Mediatheque
Image:Serpentine Pavillion 2002.jpg|[[Serpentine Gallery]] (2002, [[London]])
Image:TOD'S.jpg|TOD's Omotesando Building (2004, [[Tokyo]])
Image:Mikimoto Ginza2.JPG|Mikimoto Ginza 2 (2005, Tokyo)
Image:VivoCity 19.JPG|VivoCity (2006, [[Singapore]])
Image:VivoCity 106.JPG|VivoCity
Image:Tama Art University Library.JPG|library of [[Tama Art University]] (2007, Tokyo)
File:WorkdGame2009 Stadium completed.jpg|[[World Games Stadium]]
</gallery>
==Current projects==
In September 2006, the [[Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive]] at the [[University of California, Berkeley]] announced that Toyo Ito's firm had been selected to design a new facility for the museum and film center. The project will be his first in the United States.
==Awards==
Toyo Ito has won many awards, including:
* the [[Architecture Institute of Japan Award]] for ''Silver Hut'' in 1986
* the 33rd [[Mainichi Art Award]] for ''Yatsushiro Municipal Museum'' in 1992
* the IAA 'interach ‘97' Grand Prix of the Union of Architects in Bulgaria Gold Medal in 1997
* the Education Minister’s Art Encouragement Prize in Japan in 1998,
* the Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize in architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2000
* the gold prize of the Japanese Good Design Award in 2001
* the [[RIBA]] [[Royal Gold Medal]] in 2005
* the Frederick Kiesler Award for Architecture and the Arts 2008
==Professorship==
Toyo Ito holds a professorship at the Tokyo Women's University. He is also an honorary professor at the [[University of North London]] and has served as guest professor at [[Columbia University]]. He is teaching at [[Tama Art University]] as a Visiting Professor.
==Articles==
*Orlandoni, Alessandra "Interview with Toyo Ito" - [The Plan 016, 2006 -http://www.theplan.it]
* Daniell, Thomas [http://www.dnp.co.jp/artscape/eng/focus/0611_02.html "Toyo Ito: The New 'Real' in Architecture"]
*[[Nicolai Ouroussoff]], [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/12/arts/design/12ouro.html?em "Inside the Exteriors of Architect Toyo Ito"]. ''[[New York Times]]'', July 8, 2009.
* [http://www.designboom.com/eng/interview/ito.html Interview with Toyo Ito]
==External links==
{{Commonscat|Toyo Ito}}
*[http://www.actar.com/index.php?option=com_dbquery&task=ExecuteQuery&qid=2&idllibre=2360&lang=en Sendai Mediatheque (Actar, Barcelona)]
* [http://www.architectureweek.com/2007/0110/culture_1-1.html Toyo Ito interviewed by C.B.Liddell at Architecture Week]
* [http://www.danda.be/gallery/architect/toyo-ito/ Pavilions by Toyo Ito]
* [http://www.c-channel.com/c00088/index_en.html Biography and works]
* [http://www.geocities.com/medit1976b3/ito.htm Toyo Ito Biography, Articles and Interviews]
* [http://www.cosasqueverenbarcelona.com/2009/03/toyo-ito-arquitectura-japonesa-del-s.html Toyo Ito, Japanese architecture for the 21st century]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ito, Toyo}}
[[Category:1941 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Japanese architects]]
[[Category:University of Tokyo alumni]]
[[de:Toyo Ito]]
[[es:Toyō Itō]]
[[fr:Toyo Ito]]
[[it:Toyo Ito]]
[[ka:ტოიო იტო]]
[[nl:Toyo Ito (architect)]]
[[ja:伊東豊雄]]
[[pt:Toyo Ito]]
[[sk:Toyo Ito]]
[[sv:Toyo Ito]]
[[th:โตโยโอะ อิโต]]
[[zh:伊東豊雄]]</text>
</revision>
</page>
<page>
<title>Arata Isozaki</title>
<id>1825766</id>
<revision>
<id>294796814</id>
<timestamp>2009-06-06T15:42:29Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<username>Piotrus</username>
<id>59002</id>
</contributor>
<minor/>
<text xml:space="preserve">[[Image:Mito_Art_Tower.JPG|thumb|right|Art Tower in [[Mito, Ibaraki]]]]
[[Image:KyotoConcertHall.jpg|thumb|right| Kyoto Concert Hall]]
'''Arata Isozaki''' (磯崎新, ''Isozaki Arata''; born [[23 July]] [[1931]]) is a [[Japan]]ese architect from [[Ōita, Ōita]]. He won the [[Royal Institute of British Architects|RIBA]] gold medal in 1986. He graduated from the [[University of Tokyo]] in 1954. Isozaki worked under [[Kenzo Tange]] until establishing his own firm in 1963.
==Notable works include==
*[[COSI Columbus]], [[Columbus, Ohio]], [[United States]]
*Kyoto Concert Hall, [[Kyoto, Kyoto]], [[Japan]]
*[[Ōita Prefecture|Ōita]] Prefectural Library, [[Ōita, Ōita]], Japan
*[[Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles|Museum of Contemporary Art]] (MOCA), [[Los Angeles, California]], United States
*Art Tower Mito, 1990
*[[Palau Sant Jordi|Sports Hall]] for the [[1992 Summer Olympics]], [[Barcelona]], [[Spain]]
*[[Team Disney|Team Disney Orlando]], [[Florida]], United States
<!--
*New [[Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building|Tokyo City Hall]], [[Tokyo]], Japan
-- this was only a competition idea, and he lost to Kenzo Tange.
-->
*[[Cornell University#Qatar campus|Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar]], [[Education City, Qatar|Education City]], near [[Doha]]
*[[Torino Palasport Olimpico]], [[Turin]], [[Italy]]
*[[Centre of Japanese Art and Technology]], [[Kraków]], [[Poland]]
*[[Domus Casa Del Hombre 1995]], [[La Coruña]], [[Spain]]
*[[Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar]], opened 2004
*[[Bond University]], [[Gold Coast, Queensland]], [[Australia]]
*[[Isozaki Atea]], [[Bilbao]], Spain
*[[Shenzhen Cultural Center]], [[Shenzhen]], [[China]]
==Current projects include==
*The [[University of Central Asia]]'s three [[campus]]es in [[Tekeli]], [[Kazakhstan]]; [[Naryn]], the [[Kyrgyzstan|Kyrgyz Republic]]; and [[Khorog]], [[Tajikistan]]
*The new Library of [[Maranello]] ([[Italy]]), competition winner
*The renovation of the railway station in [[Bologna]] ([[Italy]]), competition winner
==External links==
* [http://www.isozaki.co.jp/ Arata Isozaki & associates]
* [http://www.arataisozaki.net/ Arata Isozaki & associates España]
*Corkill, Edan. "[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fl20080601x1.html Arata Isozaki: Astonishing by design]". ''Japan Times,'' [[1 June]] [[2008]].
{{Commonscat|Arata Isozaki}}
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</page>
<page>
<title>Fumihiko Maki</title>
<id>2233161</id>
<revision>
<id>295875037</id>
<timestamp>2009-06-11T23:12:05Z</timestamp>
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<username>Alphabravotango</username>
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<comment>/* Works */</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">[[Image:Spiral house Tokyo.jpg|thumb|200px|Spiral house in Tokyo]]
'''Fumihiko Maki''' (槇文彦, ''Maki Fumihiko'') (born [[Tokyo]], [[September 6]], [[1928]]) is a Japanese architect and currently teaching at [[Keio University SFC]]. After studying at the [[University of Tokyo]] he moved to the [[Cranbrook Academy of Art]] in [[Bloomfield Hills]], [[Michigan]], and then to [[Harvard Graduate School of Design]]. In 1956, he took a post as assistant professor of architecture at [[Washington University in St. Louis]], where he also was awarded his first commission: the design of Steinberg Hall (an art center) on the university's [[Danforth Campus]]. This building remained his only completed work in the United States<ref>[http://www.pritzkerprize.com/maki2.htm Fumihiko Maki<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> until 2006, when he finished the new home for the [[Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum]] and Walker Hall (both also at Washington University). He worked for Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill in [[New York]] and for Sert Jackson and Associates in [[Cambridge]] and founded Maki and Associates in 1965. In 1960 he returned to Japan to help establish the Metabolism Group. He often uses metal and glass materials.
In 1993 he received the prestigious [[Pritzker Prize]] at the [[Prague]] [[Prague Castle|Castle]]. In 2006, he was invited to join the judging panel for an international design competition for the new [[Gardens by the Bay]] in [[Singapore]].
==Works==
* Steinberg Hall at Washington University (1960s in St. Louis)
* Hillside Terrace (1969- in Tokyo)
*[[St. Mary's International School]] (1971 In Tokyo.)
* Osaka Prefectural Sports Center (1972, [[Takaishi, Osaka]])
*[[Spiral (building)|Spiral]] (1985 In Tokyo.)
*[[Makuhari Messe]] (1989 In Chiba.)
*[[Keio University Shonan Fujisawa Campus]](1990, Kanagawa)
*[[Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium]] (1991 in [[Sendagaya]], Tokyo)
*[[Yerba Buena Center for the Arts]] (1993 in San Francisco)
* Ensemble ''Global Gate'' (2000-2006 in [[Düsseldorf]])
* Office Building ''Solitaire'' (2001 in [[Düsseldorf]])
*[[TV Asahi]] (2003 In Tokyo.)
*[[Republic Polytechnic]] (2006 in Singapore)
*[[Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum]] and Walker Hall at Washington University(2006 in St. Louis)
*[[Delegation of the Ismaili Imamat]] (2008 in [[Ottawa]])
*Building Square 3 at Novartis Campus (2009 in [[Basel, Switzerland]])
==Works in Progress==
*[[Aga Khan Museum]] in [[Toronto]]
*[[United Nations]] new building in [[New York City]]
*Tower 4 ([[150 Greenwich Street]]) of the new [[World Trade Center]] in New York City
*[[MIT Media Lab]] Extension at [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] in Cambridge, Massachusetts
*[[Taipei Main Station]] of [[Taoyuan International Airport Access MRT System]] in Taipei
==References==
{{Reflist}}
==External links==
{{commonscat|Fumihiko Maki}}
*[http://www.pritzkerprize.com/maki2.htm Pritzker Prize Official Site - Fumiho Maki]
*[http://www.maki-and-associates.co.jp/ Maki and Associates Official Site]
*[http://www.wtc.com/media/videos/Fumihiko%20Maki Interview with Fumihiko Maki](video)
*[http://www.wtc.com/media/images/tower-4 Images of Tower 4, WTC](photos)
{{Wolf Prize in Arts}}
{{Pritzker Prize Winners 1979-2000}}
__NOTOC__
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</page>
<page>
<title>Yoshida Tetsuro</title>
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[[Image:Shin-puh-kan-001.jpg|thumb|Old Kyoto Central Telephone Office]]
[[Image:Osaka Central Post Office.jpg|thumb|Osaka Central Post Office (right)]]
'''Yoshida Tetsuro''' (吉田鉄郎, ''Yoshida Tetsurō''; [[May 18]], [[1894]] - [[September 8]], [[1956]]) was a [[Japan]]ese [[architecture|architect]]. He graduated from [[Tokyo University]] and entered the Ministry of Communications in 1919. He designed many [[Japan]]ese [[post office]]s, [[telegraph]] offices, and related buildings in [[Japan]]. He introduced Eastern architecture to the west, while incorporating Western architecture in his own designs, including architecture from [[Scandinavia]], [[Germany]], and the [[United States]].
== Major works==
* Old Kyoto Central Telephone Office, 1926
* Tokyo Central Post Office, 1931
* Osaka Central Post Office, 1939
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<page>
<title>Noriaki Okabe</title>
<id>4512611</id>
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'''Noriaki Okabe''' (岡部憲明; born [[December 9]], [[1947]]) is a Japanese [[architect]].
He was born in [[Shizuoka City|Shizuoka]], [[Japan]]. He had worked with [[Renzo Piano]] for twenty years in Europe, from the designing construction supervision of the [[Centre Georges Pompidou]] in [[Paris]].
Okabe, then the representative of [[Renzo Piano Building Workshop]] in Japan, won the international competition of [[Kansai International Airport]] Terminal Building in 1988 and was responsible for the design and construction supervision.
After the construction of the Terminal Building, he established Noriaki Okabe Architecture Network in 1995 in Tokyo. Now, he has been expanding the design activity from architecture to industrial design, such as train, [[Odakyu]] [[Romance Car]] [[Odakyū 50000 series VSE|series 50000 VSE]] ([[Odakyu Odawara Line]]).
==Main projects==
*[[Kansai International Airport]] Terminal Building, [[Renzo Piano Building Workshop]] Japan, Osaka
*[[Ushibuka Haiya Bridge]], [[Renzo Piano Building Workshop]] Japan, Nagasaki, Japan
*Housing in Sakura-shinmachi, Tokyo, Japan
*Valeo Unisia Transmissions Atugi (factory), Kanagawa, Japan
*[[Odakyu]] Electric Railway New Express "[[Odakyū 50000 series VSE|series Romance car VSE]]", Tokyo, Japan
*Odakyu Electric Railway New Express "[[Odakyū 60000 series MSE|series Romance car MSE]]", Tokyo, Japan
== External links ==
*[http://www.archinet.jp/ Noriaki Okabe Architecture Network, official site]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Okabe, Noriaki}}
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<page>
<title>Hiroyuki Wakabayashi</title>
<id>860086</id>
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'''Hiroyuki Wakabayashi''' (若林広幸, ''Wakabayashi Hiroyuki'', 1949-) is a [[Japanese people|Japanese]] [[architect]].
One of his first major notable works was a pickle shop in his native [[Kyoto]] in 1990, followed by Humax Pavilion in Tokyo's [[Shibuya, Tokyo|Shibuya]]. His 1995 design for the [[Rapi:t]] express train that links [[Osaka]]'s [[Namba Station]] with [[Kansai International Airport]] won the Blue Ribbon Prize. He has also designed [[Keihan Electric Railway]]'s [[Uji Station (Keihan)|Uji Station]] (1995) and the [[Mainichi Shimbun]]'s offices in Kyoto (1999).
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wakabayashi, Hiroyuki}}
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<page>
<title>Kengo Kuma</title>
<id>7998516</id>
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<timestamp>2009-08-15T13:44:50Z</timestamp>
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<comment>[[WP:AWB/T|Typo fixing]], typos fixed: acheive → achieve using [[Project:AutoWikiBrowser|AWB]]</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">[[Image:Doric.jpg|right|thumb|Doric building, [[Minato, Tokyo|Minato-ku]], [[Tokyo]], [[Japan]]]]
[[Image:Cocon-Karasuma-01.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Building by Kuma in [[Kyoto]]]]
{{nihongo|'''Kengo Kuma'''|隈 研吾|Kuma Kengo|extra=born 1954}} is a [[Japanese people|Japanese]] [[architect]].
== Biography ==
Kuma was born in [[Kanagawa Prefecture|Kanagawa]], Japan, and attended Eiko gakuen junior and senior high schools. After completing a major in architecture at the [[University of Tokyo]] in 1979, he worked for a time at [[Nihon sekkei]] and [[Toda corporation]]. He then moved to [[New York]] for further studies at [[Columbia University]] as a visiting researcher from 1985 to 1986. In 1987, he founded the "Spatial Design" studio. In 1990, "Kengo Kuma & Associates", his own studio was established. During the 1998-1999 academic year, he was a visiting professor on the faculty of environmental information at [[Keio University]]. In 2008, Kuma earned his [[Ph.D]] from Keio University , and he is currently a professor on the faculty of science and technology there, in the department of system design engineering.
Kuma's stated goal is to "recover the tradition of Japanese buildings" and to reinterpret it for the 21st century. In 1997 he won the prestigious Architectural Institute of Japan Award. Kengo Kuma is still designing architectural buildings with the inspiration of light and nature to achieve his goals such as the LVMH (Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy) Group's Japan Headquarters as well as one of the largest spas in the Caribbean for [http://delliscay.com/ Mandarin Oriental Dellis Cay].
== Selected works ==
*M2 building (1989-1991)
*Kiro-San observatory (1994)
*Kitakami Canal Museum (1994)
*Great (Bamboo) Wall House, Beijing (2002)
*Plastic House (2002)
*LVMH Group Japan headquarters (2003)
*Suntory's Tokyo office building
*Kodan apartments (2005)
*Water Block House (2007)
== External links ==
{{commons cat|Kengo Kuma}}
*[http://www.kkaa.co.jp/ Kengo Kuma and Associates]
*[http://www.delliscay.com/ Kengo Kuma Spa at Dellis Cay]
*[http://www.architecture-page.com/go/people/profiles/kengo-kuma-associates Online profile of Kengo Kuma]
*[http://www.designboom.com/eng/interview/kuma.html Interview, with photos of work]
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<page>
<title>Tachū Naitō</title>
<id>8046590</id>
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<text xml:space="preserve">[[Image:Tokyo Tower 20060211.JPG|thumb|right|Tokyo Tower]]
{{nihongo|'''Tachū Naitō'''|内藤多仲|''Naitō Tachū''|[[12 June]], [[1886]] - [[25 August]], [[1970]]}} was a Japanese architect, engineer, and professor from [[Yamanashi Prefecture]], [[Minami-Alps, Yamanashi]]. He was a father of [[seismic analysis|earthquake-proof design]] and built many [[Radio masts and towers|broadcasting]] and [[Observation tower|observation]] towers, including the [[Tokyo Tower]].
== Biography ==
Tachū Naitō attended the Old System Kofu Middle School (presently Yamanashi Prefectural Kofu First High School), he passed high school, then attended the Tokyo Imperial University (presently the [[University of Tokyo]]). First [[naval architecture]] was his major, then he turned to [[architecture]] due to the [[shipbuilding]] depression after the [[Russo-Japanese War]]. He studied with Kino Toshikata, and graduated in 1910. In 1913 he became a professor at [[Waseda University]].
In 1916 he went to America as an international student, where he devised his seismic theory of the earthquake-proof wall. While on the [[First Transcontinental Railroad]] he made observations about the movements of the luggage depending on the trains acceleration, after noticing the scattered trunks when the train made sudden stops. The lack of partitions in the luggage compartment and the disarray of the trunks led him to the structural idea of the earthquake-proof wall,<ref>Kobe Shimbun, 正平調, 30 August, 2003.[http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/seihei/030830ln13330.html]</ref> effectively a [[shear wall]].
Using the seismic structural theory that he devised, he engineered the [[Industrial Bank of Japan]]'s main office which was designed by Setsu Watanabe. Three months after the building's completion in 1923 the [[1923 Great Kantō earthquake|Great Kantō earthquake]] happened. This structure withstood the damage and Naitō included this fact in his lectures as the effectiveness of his earthquake-proof design theory had been proven.
Other than the Industrial Bank of Japan, he worked on the [[Kabuki-za]] and the Okuma auditorium. Naitō designed many broadcasting towers, in 1954 the [[Nagoya TV Tower]], in 1956 the [[Tsutenkaku]], in 1957 the [[Sapporo TV Tower]], and the [[Beppu Tower]], and in 1958 the [[Tokyo Tower]].
Tachū Naitō has held many positions and was recognized with many awards throughout his career. In 1938 he became the chairman of the [[welding]] academy, in 1941 the chair of the architectural academy, in 1954 a member of the [[Science Council of Japan]], in 1960 a member of the [[Japan Academy]], in 1962 he was awarded a distinction for cultural merit, and in 1964 he was awarded the second degree [[Order of the Rising Sun]].
On [[August 25]], [[1970]] at 9:05 AM Tachū Naitō died in the National Tokyo First Hospital, now the [[International Medical Center of Japan]], at 84 years of age. His remains were buried in the graveyard of the Naitō family in Tamareien Cemetery. His epitaph is on the right side and a bronze statue and is on the left.
== Gallery ==
<gallery>
Image:Nagoya TV Tower.JPG|Nagoya TV Tower (1954)
Image:Tsutenkaku tower.jpg|Tsutenkaku(1956)
Image:Sapporo TV Tower in the snow.jpg|Sapporo TV Tower (1957)
</gallery>
== Notes ==
<references/>
== References ==
* 『建築構造学』 ''Architecture Studies'', 1918
* 『架構建築耐震構造論』、早稲田大学出版会. ''Seismic Structural Theory'', Waseda University Publications, 1924
* 『日本の耐震建築とともに』、雪華社. ''Earthquake-proof Architecture of Japan'', Yuki Hana Corporation, 1965
* 『建築と人生』、鹿島出版. ''Architecture and Life'', Kahima Publications, 1966
* 『内藤多仲博士の業績』、鹿島出版会. ''The Achievements of Doctor Tachu Naito'', Kashima Publications, 1967
* 『タワー 内藤多仲と三塔物語』、INAX出版. ''Birth of Towers: Tachu Naito and a Tale of Three Towers'', INAX Publications, 2006
== External links ==
* {{ja icon}} 神戸新聞 正平調(2003年8月30日) [http://www.kobe-np.co.jp/seihei/030830ln13330.html]
* {{ja icon}} 歴史が眠る多磨霊園 内藤多仲 [http://www6.plala.or.jp/guti/cemetery/PERSON/N/naitou_t.html]
* {{ja icon}} タワフル(TOWERFUL) コラム 塔博士 [http://www2.odn.ne.jp/yoko-tower/column/tou-hakase/column-tou-hakase.htm]
* {{ja icon}} Hiro Satoshi Noguchi, Tachu Naito Exhibition in Ginza, [[16 October]] [[2006]] [http://journal.mycom.co.jp/news/2006/10/16/320.html]
* Tokyo Art Beat review of ''Birth of Towers: Tachu Naito and a Tale of Three Towers'' [http://www.tokyoartbeat.com/event/2006/A94B]
<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME=Naito, Tachu
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Naito Tachu (Japanese order); 内藤多仲 (kanji)
|SHORT DESCRIPTION=20th century Japanese architect and engineer
|DATE OF BIRTH=[[12 June]], [[1886]] -
|PLACE OF BIRTH=[[Minami-Alps, Yamanashi]]
|DATE OF DEATH=[[25 August]], [[1970]]
|PLACE OF DEATH=[[Tokyo]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Naito, Tachu}}
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<page>
<title>Furuichi Kōi</title>
<id>9872180</id>
<revision>
<id>289413779</id>
<timestamp>2009-05-12T06:56:29Z</timestamp>
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<username>Johnpacklambert</username>
<id>2308770</id>
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<comment>/* Aftermath */</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">{{Cleanup|date=May 2007}}{{Unreferenced|date=May 2007}}
[[Image:!!!!古市公威像0103.JPG|thumb|rigtht|300px|A statue of Furuichi Kohi in [[Tokyo University]]]]
'''Furuichi Kōi''' (古市公威 1854-1934) was a [[civil engineer]], the president of Kōka Daigaku, the present college of engineering of the [[Tokyo University]].
==Biography==
In 1854 he was born as a son of Huruichi Takashi who was Himego clan’s member in Edo. In Meiji 2, he entered Kaisei-jyo, in Meiji 3, he was elected student on scholarship in Himego han, and entered Daigaku Nankō, then studied abroad to [[Ecole Centrale des Arts et Manufactures]] in Paris as the Ministry of Education first student studying abroad. In Meiji 12 (1879), he graduated and got the degree of BE. In the same year he entered the Faculty of Science of [[University of Paris|Université de Paris]], in 1889 graduated, got Bachelor of Science, and went home and took up a post as Naimusho Doboku-kyoku Yatoi. While studying abroad in France, he was advised by an aunt in the boardinghouse to take a day off. Then he answered "Japan delay 1 day when I rested for 1 day ". In 1881, he became the University of Tokyo lecturer and after that, he concurrently held the posts of the university teacher with the bureaucrat technical expert. In 1886, when he was 32 years old, he was installed in Koka Daigaku which was the forerunner of Tokyo Daigaku Kougakubu (the University of Tokyo engineering department) first president, in 1888 was received the degree of the first Kougaku Hakushi (Doctor of Engineering) and in 1894 was installed in the first engineering works Doboku Gikan (Vice-Minister for Engineering Affairs) in Naimusho. He attempted to improve an engineering works public administration and established Doboku Hōki (an engineering works law). His typical services include the construction of Yokohama-ko. He contributed to improve the reputation of the [[Engineering Technology|engineering technology]] in Japan in the world as the first chairman in Nihon Kougakkai (Japan Federation of Engineering Societies).
==Aftermath==
[[Mishima Yukio]]'s real name was ''Hiraoka Kimitake'' and his father namede Kimitake. His grandfather was ''naimu kanryo'' (a domestic affair of state bureaucrat) and was indebted to Furuichi, by such a reason Yukio was named Kimitake.
Furuichi Kōi's statue is on just the left in the front gate in University of Tokyo ''Hongo'' premises entering.
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<page>
<title>Inokuchi Arika</title>
<id>9892856</id>
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{{Japanese name|Inokuchi}}
[[Image:!!!!井口在屋東京大学総合研究博物館小石川分館0054.JPG|thumb|rigtht|250px|Stature of Inokuchi Arika in [[Tokyo Uni.]]]]
'''Inokuchi Arika''' (井口在屋 1856-1923) was a mechanical technologist and professor. He was born in [[Kanazawa, Ishikawa|Kanazawa]], and graduated from the [[University of Tokyo]] ''Kōgakubu'' (mechanical course). In Meiji 29 (1896), he was installed in the University of Tokyo professor. He invented an Inoguchi shiki turbine pump (Inokuchi type turboalternator). He established Nihon Kikai Gakkai (Japan Institute of Mechanical Engineers)
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<page>
<title>Isoya Yoshida</title>
<id>2386719</id>
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<text xml:space="preserve">{{nihongo|'''Isoya Yoshida'''|吉田 五十八|Yoshida Isoya|[[December 19]], [[1894]], - [[March 24]], [[1974]]}} was a [[Japan]]ese [[architecture|architect]]. He graduated from Tokyo Art School (now [[Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music]]) in 1923. His style, known as ''sukiya'', combines elements of traditional Japanese architecture and [[Modernism|modernist architecture]]. He was born and died in Tokyo.
==References==
*{{cite book |author=J. P. Noffsinger |title=Isoya Yoshida: Modern/Traditional Architect of Japan |publisher=Monticello, IL |year=1980}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Yoshida, Isoya}}
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<page>
<title>Shusaku Arakawa</title>
<id>3119943</id>
<revision>
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<timestamp>2009-03-31T15:29:25Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<ip>209.176.198.34</ip>
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<text xml:space="preserve">{{Infobox Musical artist
| Img = Replace this image male.svg <!-- only free-content images are allowed for depicting living people - see [[WP:NONFREE]] -->
| Img_size = 150 |
|Name = Arakawa
|Born = {{birth date and age|1936|7|6}}<br />{{flagicon|Japan}} [[Nagoya]], [[Japan]]
|Occupation(s) = [[Artist]], [[Architect]]
|URL = [http://www.reversibledestiny.org www.reversibledestiny.org]
}}
{{nihongo|'''Arakawa'''|荒川 修作|Arakawa|extra=born July 6, 1936 in [[Nagoya]]}} is a [[Japanese people|Japanese]] [[artist]] and [[architect]]. He studied mathematics and medicine at the [[University of Tokyo]], and art at the [[Musashino Art University]].<ref>[http://www.artnet.com/library/00/0036/T003608.asp artnet.com: Resource Library: Arakawa, Shusaku]</ref> Initially he worked with [[printmaking]], using abstract and [[dada]] styles. He has lived in [[New York]] since 1961.
Arakawa met his partner [[Madeline Gins]] in 1963. Together, they founded the Architectural Body Research Foundation. They have designed and built residences (Reversible Destiny Houses, Bioscleave House, Shidami Resource Recycling Model House) and parks (Site of Reversible Destiny-Yoro). They have developed an original theory and practice of the relation of the human being to the exterior world, elaborated most extensively in their book, ''Architectural Body''. Arakawa and Gins are, together and separately, the authors of several books and exhibition volumes, most recently ''Making Dying Illegal'' (ISBN 1931824223).
== Books by Arakawa and Gins ==
*''Word Rain'' (Gins, 1969)
*''The Mechanism of Meaning'' (Arakawa & Gins, 1971)
*''Intend'' (Gins, 1973)
*''What the President Will Say and Do'' (Gins, 1984)
*''To Not to Die'' (Gins, 1987)
*''Architecture: Sites of Reversible Destiny'' (Arakawa & Gins, 1994)
*''Hellen Keller or Arakawa'' (Gins, 1994)
*''Reversible Destiny'' (Arakawa & Gins, 1997)
*''Architectural Body'' (Arakawa & Gins, 2002)
*''Making Dying Illegal'' (Arakawa & Gins, 2006)
==References==
{{Reflist}}
==External links==
*[http://www.reversibledestiny.org/abrf.php Architectural Body Research Foundation]
*[http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/03/garden/03destiny.html?_r=2&oref=slogin&oref=slogin A House Not for Mere Mortals]
*[http://www.yoro-park.com/e/rev/ Site of Reversible Destiny - Yoro]
*[http://www.artnet.com/artist/18673/shusaku-arakawa.html Gallery at artnet.com]
*[http://www.askart.com/AskART/artists/search/ArtistKeywords.aspx?searchtype=KEYWORDS&artist=78954 Facts and reference at askart.com]
*[http://www.artfacts.net/index.php/pageType/artistInfo/artist/10549 Reference at artfacts.net]
*[http://www.plazm.com/magazine/features/archive/reversible-destiny The Reversible Destiny: Architecture of Arakawa & Madeline Gins, Plazm magazine article]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Arakawa, Shusaku}}
[[Category:Japanese architects]]
[[Category:Japanese artists]]
[[Category:Japanese printmakers]]
[[Category:Contemporary artists]]
[[Category:Conceptual artists]]
[[Category:1936 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:University of Tokyo alumni]]
[[Category:People from Nagoya]]
{{Japan-architect-stub}}
[[de:Shūsaku Arakawa]]
[[fr:Shusaku Arakawa]]
[[ja:荒川修作]]</text>
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</page>
<page>
<title>Kunio Maekawa</title>
<id>10611058</id>
<revision>
<id>304031367</id>
<timestamp>2009-07-24T23:36:04Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<username>Chreod</username>
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<text xml:space="preserve">{{Infobox Architect
|name=Kunio Maekawa
|nationality=[[Japan]]
|birth_date= [[14 May]], [[1905]]
|birth_place=[[Niigata, Niigata]]
|death_date=[[26 June]], [[1986]]
|death_place=
|practice_name=
|significant_buildings= The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
|significant_projects=
|significant_design=
|awards=
|}}
{{nihongo|'''Kunio Maekawa'''|前川 國男|Maekawa Kunio}} was a [[Japan]]ese [[architect]]. He entered [[Hibiya High School|First Tokyo Middle School]] in 1918, and then [[University of Tokyo|Tokyo Imperial University]] in 1925.
== References ==
* {{cite book|title=Maekawa Kunio and the Emergence of Japanese Modernist Architecture|last=Reynolds|first=Jonathan M.|publisher=University of California Press|date=2001|id=ISBN 0520214951}}
==External links==
{{Commonscat|Kunio Maekawa}}
* Daniell, Thomas [http://www.dnp.co.jp/artscape/eng/focus/0605_02.html On Kunio Maekawa]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Maekawa, Kunio}}
[[Category:1905 births]]
[[Category:1986 deaths]]
[[Category:Japanese architects]]
[[Category:Modernist architects]]
[[Category:People from Niigata (city)]]
{{Japan-architect-stub}}
[[de:Kunio Maekawa]]
[[es:Maekawa Kunio]]
[[nl:Kunio Maekawa]]
[[fr:Kunio Maekawa]]
[[ja:前川國男]]
[[it:Kunio Maekawa]]</text>
</revision>
</page>
<page>
<title>Hidetsugu Aneha</title>
<id>3378210</id>
<revision>
<id>288197167</id>
<timestamp>2009-05-06T03:27:59Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<ip>210.234.149.58</ip>
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<comment>[[WP:UNDO|Undid]] revision 288196345 by [[Special:Contributions/210.234.149.58|210.234.149.58]] ([[User talk:210.234.149.58|talk]])</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">{{Expand|date=January 2007}}
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Aneha's arrest.jpg|200px|right|thumbnail|Hidetsugu Aneha shaved his head after his arrest. There was a rumor that he had previously worn a [[wig]].]] -->
{{nihongo|'''Hidetsugu Aneha'''|姉歯秀次|''Aneha Hidetsugu''|extra= born [[June 10]], [[1957]] in [[Osato, Miyagi|Osato]], [[Miyagi Prefecture]]}} is a former [[Japan]]ese [[architect]] and [[builder]] accused of falsifying structural data regarding the [[earthquake]] resistance of various [[condominium]]s and [[hotel]]s.
Aneha was born in [[Osato, Miyagi|Osato]], [[Miyagi Prefecture]] in 1957 and graduated from the construction program at Furukawa Technical High School in 1976. Instead of attending university, he joined an [[Osaka]]-based [[general contractor]] firm. In 1984, Aneha established an architect's office in [[Ichikawa, Chiba|Ichikawa]], [[Chiba Prefecture]]. He was licensed as a first-class architect in 1990.
On [[December 7]], [[2005]], his first-class architect license was revoked by the [[Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (Japan)|Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport]]. [[Witness]]es were summoned by the [[Diet of Japan|Diet]] on [[December 14]], and police inspected Aneha's home on [[December 20]]. On [[April 26]], [[2006]], he and seven people, including [[Moriyoshi Kimura]], [[Akira Shinozuka]] and [[Togo Fujita]] were arrested for violations of the Architect Act and other laws. Aneha's wife reportedly died after she jumped out of a condominium in Chiba in 2006.
On December 26 2006 the Tokyo District Court sentenced the architect to five years in prison plus a fine of 1.8 million yen. On February 19, 2008, the top court upheld his original sentence.
==See also==
*[[Architectural forgery in Japan]]
*[[Huser]]
*[[Susumu Ojima]]
==References==
*[http://asia.news.yahoo.com/061226/kyodo/d8m8d2n00.htm Architect Aneha sentenced to 5 years over building data fabrication]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2005/nn20051126a2.htm Data scam on quake resistance shakes the nation]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2005/nn20051203a2.htm Rogue inspection dragnet widens]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/ed/ed20051210a1.htm The depths of data fabrication ]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2006/nn20060128a3.htm 'Huser wanted disclosure delayed']
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2006/nn20060422a1.htm Aneha to be arrested over quake-resistance data]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2006/nn20060506a1.htm Aneha and seven associates in building fraud arrested]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/ed/ed20060506a1.htm Trail to the epicenter of faulty math]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2006/nn20060527a3.htm Huser head arrested in building scam]
*[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/weekly/news/nn2006/nn20060715a5.htm EHomes head admits faking papers]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aneha, Hidetsugu}}
[[Category:1957 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:People from Miyagi Prefecture]]
[[Category:Japanese architects]]
[[Category:Japanese prisoners and detainees]]
[[Category:Prisoners and detainees of Japan]]
[[fr:Hidetsugu Aneha]]</text>
</revision>
</page>
<page>
<title>Takamasa Yoshizaka</title>
<id>4376066</id>
<revision>
<id>265677478</id>
<timestamp>2009-01-22T10:50:28Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<username>Fram</username>
<id>390477</id>
</contributor>
<comment>Unsourced</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">{{unsourced|date=January 2009}}
{{nihongo|'''Takamasa Yoshizaka'''|吉阪 隆正|Yoshizaka Takamasa|extra=[[February 13]], [[1917]]—[[December 17]], [[1980]]}}, family name also romanized as '''Yosizaka''', was a [[Japan]]ese [[architect]] and former president of the [[Architectural Institute of Japan]].
{{Japan-architect-stub}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Yoshizaka, Takamasa}}
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:1980 deaths]]
[[Category:Japanese architects]]
[[ja:吉阪隆正]]</text>
</revision>
</page>
<page>
<title>Shigeru Ban</title>
<id>1749120</id>
<revision>
<id>306259373</id>
<timestamp>2009-08-05T19:07:19Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<ip>65.255.58.94</ip>
</contributor>
<comment>/* External links */</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">[[Image:Takatori Catholic Church.JPG|thumb|right|300px|[[Takatori Catholic Church]] is one of his famous paper tube structures: temporary church building erected in [[Kobe]] after [[Great Hanshin earthquake]] in 1995. It has been donated (deconstructed and moved) to Taiwan in 2005, due to be reconstructed in 2008.]]
[[Image:NomadicMuseumSantaMonica.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Ban designed the [[Nomadic Museum]] with engineers [[Buro Happold]], a temporary structure composed of 156 [[shipping container]]s.]]
'''Shigeru Ban''' (坂茂, ''Ban Shigeru''; born 1957 in [[Tokyo]], [[Japan]]) is an accomplished [[Japan]]ese and international [[architect]], most famous for his innovative work with paper, particularly recycled [[cardboard]] paper tubes used to quickly and efficiently house disaster victims. Shigeru Ban was the winner in 2005 at age 48 of the 40th annual [[Thomas Jefferson Medal in Architecture]] from the [[University of Virginia]] in [[Charlottesville]]. He was profiled by Time Magazine in their projection of 21st century innovators in the field of architecture and design.<ref name="Belinda Luscombe 2000">Belinda Luscombe, ''[http://www.time.com/time/innovators/design/profile_ban.html He Builds With a Really Tough Material: Paper.]'' Innovators, Time 100: The Next Wave. July 17, 2000.</ref>
Shigeru Ban studied at the [[Southern California Institute of Architecture]] and later went on to [[Cooper Union| Cooper Union’s School of Architecture]] where he studied under [[John Hejduk]] and graduated in 1984. Hejduk was a part of the [[The New York Five]]. From Hejduk, Ban learned not only fundamental elements of architecture, but also gained an interest in ‘architectonic poetics’ or the creation of three-dimensional poetry. Hejduk, the most experimentally minded of the New York Five, had a lasting influence on Ban, whose work has continuing explorations into basic geometric elements. Ban’s formal explorations with basic building materials helped to lead him into unique structural solutions.
For Ban, one of the most important themes in his work is the “invisible structure”. That is, he doesn’t overtly express his structural elements, but rather chooses to incorporate it into the design. Ban is not interested in the ‘newest’ materials and techniques, but rather the expression of the concept behind his building. The materials he chooses to use are deliberately chosen for how they aid the building to do so.
Ban entertains several schools of architecture, first he is a Japanese architect and uses many themes and methods found in traditional Japanese architecture (such as [[shōji]]) and the idea of a ‘universal floor’ to allow continuity between all rooms in a house. In his buildings, this translates to a floor without change in elevation. By choosing to study under Hejduk, Ban opted to do something different. Hejduk’s Rationalist views on architecture provided a way of revisiting Western modernism and gaining a richer appreciation than the reductive vision of it as a rationalized version of the traditionalist--yet ultra-modern--Japanese space. With his Western education and influences, Ban has become of the forerunning Japanese architects who embrace the combination of Western and Eastern building forms and methods. Perhaps most influential from Hejduk was the study of the structure of architectural systems. Ban is most-famous now for his innovative work with paper and cardboard tubing as a material for building construction. He was the first architect in Japan to construct a building primarily out of [[paper]], with his paper house and required special approval for his building to pass Japan’s [[building code]]. Ban is attracted to using paper because of its low-cost, its recyclable, low-tech and they’re replaceable. The last aspect of Ban’s influences is his [[humanitarianism]] and his attraction to ecological architecture. Ban’s work with paper and other materials is heavily based on its [[Sustainable|sustanability]] and because it produces very little waste. As a result of this, Ban’s [[DIY]] [[Refugee shelter]]s (used in Japan after the [[Kobe earthquake]], in [[Turkey]], [[Rwanda]] and around the world) are very popular and effective for low-cost disaster relief-housing.
Ban created the Japanese pavilion building at [[Expo 2000]] in Hanover in collaboration with the architect [[Frei Otto]] and structural engineers [[Buro Happold]]. The 72m long [[gridshell]] structure was made with paper tubes. But due to stringent building laws in Germany, the roof had to be reinforced with a substructure. After the exhibition the structure was [[recycling|recycled]] and returned to paper pulp.<ref name="Belinda Luscombe 2000"/>
Ban fits well into the category of “Ecological Architects” but he also can make solid claims for being modernist, a Japanese experimentalist as well as a rationalist. “I don’t like waste” is an apt quote from Ban, summing up his philosophy, known as “Paper Architecture".
==Major works==
* Furniture House, a series of prefabricated homes built in Japan, China, and the US
* [[Curtain wall house]] (1995), Tabashi, [[Tokyo]], Japan
* Naked House (2000), Saitama, Kawagoe prefecture, [[Japan]]
* Japanese Pavilion (2000) at Hannover World Exhibition Expo 2000, [[Hannover]], [[Germany]]
* [[Nomadic Museum]] (2005-present), built to house Gregory Colbert's video/photo work "Ashes and Snow"
* [[Takatori Catholic Church]], [[Hyōgo Prefecture]], [[Japan]]. ''(JR Kobe Line, 15 minutes walk from Takatori station)''
* Musée d'art Moderne Georges Pompidou, Metz, France (expected completion date: 2009)
* Luxurious villa designs Maison S und Maison H on an exclusive private island: Mandarin Oriental [http://www.delliscay.com Dellis Cay]
==References==
<references/>
==External links==
* [http://www.shigerubanarchitects.com/ Official site]
* [http://storiesofhouses.blogspot.com/#112937488712509791 The naked house in Kawagoe]
* [http://delliscay.com/ Mandarin Oriental Dellis Cay]
* [http://www.centrepompidou-metz.com/ The Pompidou Center in Metz]
[[Category:1957 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Japanese architects|Ban, Shigeru]]
[[Category:The Cooper Union alumni|Ban, Shigeru]]
[[Category:Keio University faculty|Ban, Shigeru]]
[[cs:Šigeru Ban]]
[[de:Shigeru Ban]]
[[es:Shigeru Ban]]
[[fr:Shigeru Ban]]
[[ko:반 시게루]]
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[[ja:坂茂]]
[[pl:Shigeru Ban]]
[[fi:Shigeru Ban]]
[[sv:Shigeru Ban]]</text>
</revision>
</page>
<page>
<title>List of Japanese architects</title>
<id>11389280</id>
<revision>
<id>282950457</id>
<timestamp>2009-04-10T10:28:29Z</timestamp>
<contributor>
<username>ACSE</username>
<id>2995750</id>
</contributor>
<comment>/* Meiji period */</comment>
<text xml:space="preserve">The following is a chronological list of '''[[Japan|Japanese]] [[architect]]s'''. Some of their major architectural works are listed after each name.
<!-- Order of their birthdates -->
== Middle Ages ==
== Meiji period ==
*[[Takeda Ayasaburō]]
*[[Kunio Maekawa]]
*[[Furuichi Kōi]]
*[[Inokuchi Arika]]
*[[Yoshida Tetsuro]]
== Post World War II ==
[[image:MOMAyard.JPG|thumb|right|[[MoMA]], [[New York]]<Br>Designed by [[Yoshio Taniguchi]]]]
[[Image:Church of Light.JPG|thumb|right|[[Church of the Light]], [[Osaka]]<Br>Designed by [[Tadao Ando]]]]
*[[Tadao Ando]]
*[[Hidetsugu Aneha]]
*[[Shusaku Arakawa]]
*[[Shigeru Ban]]
*[[Hiroshi Hara (architect)|Hiroshi Hara]]
*[[Arata Isozaki]]
*[[Toyo Ito]]
*[[Atsushi Kitagawara]]
*[[Kengo Kuma]]
*[[Kisho Kurokawa]]
*[[Fumihiko Maki]]
*[[Tachū Naitō]]
*[[Noriaki Okabe]]
*[[Kazuyo Sejima]]
*[[Hiroshi Takahashi (architect)|Hiroshi Takahashi]]
*[[Kenzo Tange]]
*[[Yoshio Taniguchi]]
*[[Hiroyuki Wakabayashi]]
*[[Isoya Yoshida]]
*[[Takamasa Yoshizaka]]
== See also ==