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side_sponsors.php
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The AIA gratefully
acknowledges the following sponsors of our 150th Anniversary
celebration:
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Founders Circle: $1,000,000:
McGraw-Hill Construction,
Official Media
Sponsor
Autodesk,
Official Software Sponsor |
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Year Awarded: 1966
Born: September 04, 1913;
Osaka, Japan
Died: 2005;
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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.
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1991: Tokyo City Hall, Tokyo, Japan
1990: Fuji Broadcasting Center, Tokyo
1967: Yamanashi Press & Broadcasting Center, Yamanashi,
Japan
1964: Olympic Arenas, Tokyo, Japan
1963: St. Mary's Cathedral (Roman Catholic), Tokyo
1963: Kurashiki City Hall, Kurashiki, Japan
1961: Ichinomiya Rowhouses, Ichinomiya, Japan
1957: Sogestu Art Center, Tokyo, Japan
1956: Hiroshima Peace Center Biography
Kenzo Tange is considered one of the 20th centurys most
important architects. His work can be found on five
continents.
Born in Osaka, Japan, Tange lived in Imabari on Shikoku Island
until he was in junior high school. He entered the University of
Tokyo in 1935 and graduated from the architecture department in
1938. After graduation, he worked for Kunio Maekawa for a few
years; in 1942 he entered graduate school at University of Tokyo,
where he studied city planning and subsequently took a position as
an assistant professor of architecture. That same year, 1946, he
organized the Tange Laboratory, where associates included Sachio
Otani, Takashi Asada, Taneo Oki, Fumihiko Maki, Koji Kamiya, Arata
Isozaki, and Kisho Kurokawa.
In 1949 Tange was selected to design Hiroshimas Peace Park
and Peace Center.
In 1959 Tange earned his doctorate in engineering, writing
Spatial Structure in a Large City as his thesis. From this
work came his Plan for Tokyo 1960, which addressed the issues of
urban structure that support growth and change. Though not fully
implemented, the plan received worldwide attention for his
innovative solutions to the problems posed by urban growth.
In 1961 he established his firm Kenzo Tange & Urtec, which
later became Kenzo Tange Associates. From 1963 to 1974, he taught
urban engineering at the University of Tokyo, then retired as
professor emeritus. He has been a guest professor at MIT and has
lectured at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, the University of California
at Berkeley, and other prestigious schools.
Tange was awarded the 1987 Pritzker Architecture Prize. In the
citation, his design for the 1964 Olympic gymnasium in Tokyo was
described as among the most beautiful buildings of the 20th
century. He has also received the RIBA Royal Gold Medal and
the French Academy of Architecture Gold Medal.
Though his early style combines modernism with traditional Japanese
design, he embraced the International style later in his career. He
advocated constructing large metropolitan cities that address all
the needs of its constituents, including service, residential,
employment, and transportation aspects. He consistently designed
his cities with a clearly articulated structure, but related it to
the spiritual and personal expressions and practices of the people
who would live and work in the space. |
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