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Kengo Kuma: My Life as an Architect in Tokyo

Author/EditorKuma, Kengo (Author)
ISBN: 9780500343616
Pub Date06/05/2021
BindingHardback
Pages128
Dimensions (mm)185(h) * 135(w)
Kengo Kuma, architect of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics stadium, gives a personal tour of Tokyo's key buildings.
¥3,374
excluding shipping
Availability: Available to order but dispatch within 7-10 days
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It was around Kengo Kuma's tenth birthday that he came into contact with Kenzo Tange's fishlike Yoyogi National Gymnastics building, completed for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, and determined that he would become an architect. In the intervening five or so decades, he has become one of the world's most fascinating and influential architects. His design of the National Stadium for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics provides a poetic circularity to his career as an architect, and an opportunity for him to reflect on his own development.

Kuma is known throughout the world for his formally daring and materially expressive buildings, recognized for his inventive use of traditional materials, and his use of innovative materials in vernacular forms. He is perhaps less known for his work inside his native Japan, where he works actively towards the preservation of ancient building techniques and craft. A keen curiosity for all forms of building and a wealth of knowledge about the world acquired through expansive travels make Kuma a unique commentator on Tokyo's dynamic architecture.

Through twenty-five stories, this intimate little publication paints a picture of how a building inspired a boy to become an architect, how Japan's national heritage helped form his thinking, and how his professional experience has made him one of the most successful architects of his generation. This book contains something for everyone: design acumen, insights into Japanese culture, a tour of Tokyo and the heartfelt commitment to producing buildings that have meaning and longevity.

It was around Kengo Kuma's tenth birthday that he came into contact with Kenzo Tange's fishlike Yoyogi National Gymnastics building, completed for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, and determined that he would become an architect. In the intervening five or so decades, he has become one of the world's most fascinating and influential architects. His design of the National Stadium for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics provides a poetic circularity to his career as an architect, and an opportunity for him to reflect on his own development.

Kuma is known throughout the world for his formally daring and materially expressive buildings, recognized for his inventive use of traditional materials, and his use of innovative materials in vernacular forms. He is perhaps less known for his work inside his native Japan, where he works actively towards the preservation of ancient building techniques and craft. A keen curiosity for all forms of building and a wealth of knowledge about the world acquired through expansive travels make Kuma a unique commentator on Tokyo's dynamic architecture.

Through twenty-five stories, this intimate little publication paints a picture of how a building inspired a boy to become an architect, how Japan's national heritage helped form his thinking, and how his professional experience has made him one of the most successful architects of his generation. This book contains something for everyone: design acumen, insights into Japanese culture, a tour of Tokyo and the heartfelt commitment to producing buildings that have meaning and longevity.

Kengo Kuma established Kengo Kuma & Associates in 1990 and went on to become Professor at the Graduate School of Architecture, University of Tokyo in 2009. He is the author of several books, including Anti-Object and Kyokai: A Japanese Technique for Articulating Space. His work has been featured in numerous publications, including XS Extreme (Thames & Hudson).

Introduction by Kengo Kuma Yoyogi National Gymnasium, Kenzo Tange, 1964 Shibuya Daikan-yama One Omotesando, Kengo Kuma, 2003 Meiji Jingu Museum, Kengo Kuma, 2019 Nezu Museum, Kengo Kuma, 2009 Sunny Hills, Kengo Kuma, 2014 National Stadium, Kengo Kuma, 2020 Suntory Museum of Art, Kengo Kuma, 2007 Kitte, Kengo Kuma, 2012 Shinjuku Mejiro Ikebukuro Ueno & Yanesen Jugetsudo Kabuki-za, Kengo Kuma, 2013 Tsukiji & Shinbashi Takanawa Gateway Station, Kengo Kuma, ongoing La Kagu, Kengo Kuma, ongoing Akagi Shrine, Kengo Kuma, 2010 Daiwa Ubiquitous Computing Research Building, Kengo Kuma, 2014 Western Tokyo Asakusa Culture Tourist Information Centre, Kengo Kuma, 2012 Mukojima Tetchan, Kengo Kuma, 2014 Directory Buildings by Kengo Kuma & Associates Buildings by other architects

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