Categories: Architecture

Celebrating Kenzo Tange

Timothy J. McClimon, president of the American Express Foundation, aptly proclaimed: ‘We recognize these sites as symbols of national and local identity, and value the role that their preservation can play in attracting visitors and revitalizing communities.’

The winner of the 1987 Pritzker Prize, Tange (1913–2005) became inspired to study architecture when he stumbled upon the seminal works of Le Corbusier in an art journal. He received his degree from Tokyo University, where he later worked as assistant professor; his students included names such as Arata Isozaki, Fumihiko Maki, and Taneo Oki.

Tange was an architect by training but also carried much clout as an urban planner, playing a large role in the rebuilding of Hiroshima after the Second World War. Regarding his famous 1960 plan for Tokyo, the abstract of the ‘Urban Structure for the Expanding Metropolis’ by Zhongjie Lin reads thus:

Tange attempted to impose a new physical order on Tokyo, which would accommodate the city’s continued expansion and internal regeneration. The scheme, featuring a linear series of interlocking loops expanding Tokyo across the bay, has often been regarded as initiating the decade-long megastructural movement.

Tange worked, primarily, in Japan. Some of his most famous works in the country include the Hiroshima Peace Center and Memorial Park, the Grand Prince Hotel Akasaka, St. Mary’s Cathedral, and the Sogetsu Art Center. In the United States, his only completed project is the enormous 1974 addition to the Minneapolis Art Museum.

Possibly Tange’s most famous (and repeated) quote, which the Pritzker website calls a recurrent theme that has been verbalized, is:

Click Here Need Help?

Architecture must have something that appeals to the human heart, but even then, basic forms, spaces and appearances must be logical. Creative work is expressed in our time as a union of technology and humanity. The role of tradition is that of a catalyst, which furthers a chemical reaction, but is no longer detectable in the end result. Tradition can, to be sure, participate in a creation, but it can no longer be creative itself.

BluEntCAD

Recent Posts

A Guide to 3D Condo and Apartment Rendering for Residential Projects

The leisure of low-cost rental housing and multifamily residencies drives the development of condominiums, condos,…

5 days ago

3 Common Stone Shop Drawings Mistakes to Avoid

The very first step in starting a project requiring actual stonework instructs architects and designers…

1 week ago

What’s the Role of Renovation Drawings in Remodeling Projects?

Millions of property owners upgrade their living spaces every year. Home remodelers purposefully hire architectural…

2 weeks ago

Essential Components of Architectural Millwork Drawings

Architectural millwork drawings are the technical drawings of a building’s interior and exterior designs, featuring…

2 weeks ago

How Does 3D Rendering & Floor Plans Help in Tiny Home Development?

How often have you heard the phrase 'less is more' from your clients? That may…

3 weeks ago

What is Real Time Rendering in Real Estate and Architectural Renovations?

Real time rendering in 3D takes us ahead of the time when virtual reality (VR)…

3 weeks ago